To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

1 VOLUME XLI. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1850. NUMBER 2. , PUBMHHKI) EVERY T U K ri l A Y MOWNINH BV MCOTT & IUH, OH. 1 1 K I' f 1 ' K nnUTU-KAST chunks of man bt. and scuas aii.v. THESIS lnvnrhibly In advance. Week y per annum In Culurnhus out ol the city; Ity iiihII, hi 11 file Tif libs of tuiir will upwards Tim nbs of ten ami upwards, to one address Daily, usion Tri-Weekly, do - Weekly do., i inula vj; To club of live tuid upwardi 4U The Journal In also published Dally and Tri-Weekly during the year ; Daily per annum, by mail, T ; Tri-Weekly, :. lit oo . 1 50 , 1 00 ,.. 1 W Kates of Adverilahia; Weekly Paper t Uneiquare, 10 line or lew, one insertion " " earli H'lditiuual " " ' " 1 month S " " :i " fl " " " 15 " " " uliangPBhle monthly, par annum i " weekly " " Standing card, on iqnaro or less, " oohiinn,cliai)Keallofuartrly," " W mm lot) IK) Othercaiei not provided for, charitable, in conformity with the ihnTB rates. , ... All leaded advertlieinniiU tobcchnrge.il not leaetliarj d.oublfltho above ratoi, and measured a if solid. Advertisement on the Inside exclusively, to be charaiid at the rate of 50 per cent. In advance on the above ratei. TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER :l, lfi.r0. KriHii tlm Cincinnati Daily Commercial. The Curtlnif(e Convention. Inharmonious Organization' Contentious Spirits Speak-trt Choked Down Deluire Factious Outriders Ad journment to tne Cuyttmt Buttle and liloodsiea. At an early hour nu Saturday morning one of our e putters waa on the ground at Carthaue. prepared, like tho "chiol," to "tike notes "and " print 'cm" The a - mm ii bin git waa the largest he ever remembers to have wiiiicsBid on a iimilnr occasion. A constant stream ol vehicles, loaded with " submissive," " factious,' und all "thr kinil of spirits, poured in from every direction, ami continued I'm in early dawn until the limit of noon l no two public houses rivals, by the wav. an to par ty )ti( rencuH did not begin to In ninth idirlicr l'ur lialf tho ussem bin go, ami thu sheds uiui stables of the vicin ity were crowded during thi) ruin, while hundreds look refuge in their horseless vehicles, and enioyed ihem- , 5 on solves as be! they could, matiy at wild vehicles having 8 oo M)Mn provided with a" slight amile " of delicate stores Ho ' ,,rf-"',ll,,d hy a wiie eyo to contingencies. . I he pru-"h oo 1 dent ii "til never goes far from home without hi oin- nf on oreiin, and another sort ol men would rather stay at ..D.p)0 .. o as The Grand How of Hie Hamilton jLo-cos "NeniUor' Jolinson ooiiteslinH Uin sent iifiuin lliinnony t Tlio Commercial of yi slerday cuitainod the fullest m couut wo h ive ri-i'.i-iVL-d of the doing ol the hiirmo-ninua democracy of Hamilton county at Carthago, where they attempted to mnke their comity nomination.. Wo traiu fer the di;cripiioii of the dny'i work to our column! Jor tlio beiietit of our readers. It ia worth rcadinji- Theae Homilton Loroforoahear olout the same rolativo poaition to the democracy of Ohio, that i he Ohio democracy does to thai parly in the Uti. ion. Gen, Call's organ at Detroit said, a few dayao, that the Ohio Locolocot had a wny of running the currency qiieation, &c into the ground, a little ahead of any other Btato. So thu Hamilton Locofocna, in ail the rdementa of diaordorly radiculam, keep a respectful distance ahead of the real of the State. But read the proceeding and judjje for youratdvea. More Hurinouy iiieiil prosei for the Democracy Groinis of the bitter ciidcro The uiiuouucoimmt of un iutoiitiou tu establish an-otficr Deuiocmtic paper at WawhitiKton City, and of diacarditig the servicea of Father Hie hie and his orpin ha thrown that venerable Galphin into a nervous atate. lie can see dothiug but diacord of tin: Democracy and .diM)lutiuti of the Union, by uch u atop. W hether j the old gentleman meaim the " Union," iiewsaper or the union of these Htntea, we are not advined. We with tho attention of our renders to the following lament which appeared in the Union of August i7. It don't hok much like that harmony and brotherly good will of which that party, in day pnat, wt-re won' to honst : A Nkw Tokch or Discord. After our jmhlio cuuu-cilt have been dial me ted for nearly nine mouths by that emharraaaiui! topic which has ao long agitated the public mind ; whiUt the series of live bills before Congress has j 1 1 h t pusa'-d the S.-iinte, and it is hoped will puss tlm Houho of Representative ; whilst we . seemed lo be catehhig a vtw of land, and truted to reach i he port in safety ; and whilst every man who sighs for peaee is hoping to obtain it, uiiew element of discord is to lie thrown into the bosom ot the community t It is impossible to mistake the object, the agents, uud the means which are involved. It has long been suspected that Col. tieuton would be brought oui aa a candidate for the no't preaidency, and liint have been g veil out of the i:fltablitlimeiit of a journal which ia intended to promote his aapii atioim. Defeated aa hia friends hive recently been in the election of Missouri, and cut otf ns he ia from the prospect of a re-elect imi lo the Semite of the United Stale a suggestion haa escaped from his friend lhal he would he a candidate lor the congressional district of St. Loni in IS.Vj, and that when a member of the House he would become a candidate for the chair. It hn even been prooa' l, with very little iiwwb uty, indeed, on the part of the projector, thiil hi elevnlion to the chair of iho Hnuae rtho'uld become the teat in the eleeiiun of members of Congress throughout the Union. Now, the scheme of rimuinK him for ihe preaidencv doe not ititerlere with the other design; for in case no should not he elected President, he may alill aspire to ihe honor of the chair. We observe n letter nddrearnl by a correspondent in this city to tlie New York Evening Post on the litli inat., which point ditecily nt lies object. Tho following extract will develop Hume of the tneiiim and cliques upon which the new upinmt i to depend lor sticcea. Alter giving a very ili-nifi-'imoiis atateineiit of the manlier in which Mr," Van Huren was siiieieded in the in. ruination o the Itultilliore ('ouveniion of 1H I4, and alter referring to tho election of Mr. I'olk, mid ulier groaaly iniHrepresi-uting tlie changes which it produced in the democratic party, this puniHiu uml pedantic author ppK-eeds o open the schcuiu whii h th- se diacoii-tented Van Buren and Benton men have now in view, The git of the whole matter ia contained in the following piinigiaph from tho Washington letter : "The aoiiiheru wine of the areat and lriumphnui na tional democratic party ha degenerated into a mere appeiidnL'dol a iluve oliircliy, wliieli tlirenieu uti stability of tho Union, while the northern portion m apht iiMh several tm tioiia, each clnimin' tne Hpoaunic aiicccasioti.' and all ol llimn, like ihe iiutxriniiaio artist who wrote ' a home' -over hi picture of tint animal. relviue lor succeaa on the ilmtiuctness with wiin li Un term democntt ia embla.oiied mi their buniiers, and the national govern! it, with ila vat array of pme and inlluence, hi pa-seil mtu Hie Initios ol tun open and conaitleul eiieiiiiea nf iHiimhir richi. In view of this slite of thiiu'a, it is proposed to ctuhh-li, at the scat of the national government. democratic paper thai will extiresa the wishes and will of the d mocnit ic musses, and vindicate the simple and sublime crcd ot democraey. It will present the name of the great senator ot Minim ns itM-nuiiiilaie lor llic presnieney, not merely thai ho atone, ol all other men now hvinir, deserves lhat exalted honor, hul that his political ante. rodent mil nn-sent position will serve a n centre und rallying point for the organization of the deim cintic aenliineiit of the inetimi, mid best secure nhk the detection mid iMiiotnro ftf tlie ' blind ifiiih s uinl hvpoctites,1 end the retor;ilioii ol the nati"iial government to the .leth rsonimi (Hilii'y. 'I lie ptopnety nay the neeessity of aiich a nimenii nl is apparent to eve ry tedecliiu deinmTnt. While the Vlave interest is represented here by the Southern Press, the tniilV ami money interest hv the Ititclligetir.-r, nnd the trading and compnuiiKtiiiii politieiinin by thai poliin ul tnoti slrosltv, the UasluiiL'tnu I mou, the oice ol the masM- the people, who make mid ur.tu'iko P res id tits, is un heard and imfelt in the imtion d counsels, nnd their go vernment threatened with oertbrow, or to lie surren dered up. the victim ami spoil of contending 1 ml cr ests.' " The ninnstrosity " of thi project require but very few words to expose it. Here we mive a acheine which, under the pretence of rallying the deiuiMTntii nmsars on the prent di-mocratic principles, is intended to combine all the element of discord free-anilism, Van Uui-miism. Beutoiiisiu, and Sewaidtin, into one monstrous mats tu gialily ihe iiinbitioii of a disnlb'ct etl and aspiring iiidividnul. Mils cnahinmc iiinot press his pretuisions without rt-viing the contest which ha so long affitntrd the country. They could not elect him on the principle ot Iree-soilum without i'lontni; the whole South, and sneriricins the Uni m is' If. Yet is this moiiBiroiis pint now to be hatched, at a moment when there were sanguine hopes of passion the bills before the house, uml givnm peace in ihe Union. U ia to be sent forth niialu lo agilelo Iho country It run-not succeed without dividing the democratic party, (a that party is also divided only to he deieatcil tn Missouri,) and i ividiug the Union itself. ICullier I'erttonnl. The huimoiiiou Democracy of Hamilloiu ouul) ulee in one thing in branding their party ns knave and look They mukeoiit ihe case clearly. Head this: The Dispatch uv we makenn ass of mi rue If. Well, the editor of that jmpei has no trouble tu thai way, nature duUhat job lor him. injuim We would call attention to the advertisement in an other column of the f emale Medical College Bt Fhili-delphiii. Theae MedicolColleye for females are a new thing under the Ann-Wean sun, but tho idea isanoicot- leut one. We know of no reason why females cannot become good physicians, ami we can see many gondrea- j tons why ihe re should he femule physician foi female patients. And even for males, suffering with some diseases heart affections for itHlaucu, they would he first rate. We trust the plnn will succeed. A mun mimed McCullum, a resident of Covington, Ky, was brutally murdered iu that city, on SaMrday night lit, by a party of three jm rsotis who ft 11 upon him, and beat him with clubs mid -ttom-a, u lhal he died iu a few hours. (T7"Th) New Yorkers are making great an .ingemcni lor amusements the coming fall and winter Iu iwehe tho at res and opern hnisos, thirty twotliouauiid and hmr hundred people aie furnished with fun, at lU rule of ai least flOU.imO peruight. The Indianapolis Slate Journal states Ihe number of burials in that city the last teu days of August to be 55, one-half of whom were from the country, and one-fourth vera reported to be of cholera. home than risk the chances of a " sntritual comforter abroad. The world's wisdom seems to grow at ihe corn crop increases, eVoii a a preserved taupom attain to double its size iu a iur of alcohol. The crowd was a motley one, presenting all aorta of menial anu physical diversities, all degrees ot iRleni, from idiocy up to minds ol the most commanding powers, and ill I shades and phases of temperament, from meek humiliation and submissive antialaction under any circuniBtniireB, to revolting hostility under all circumstances. WhigH, Deinucniu, Bolters, Free Hollers, Nothingarians. Dou't-eare-a-ilainus, and, hi short, every ocl, segment, and division of main parties and deiaehnienlB of parties, were repj.'a.-nted in that motley uiuas. Little knots tied themselves up in little corners to discuss confused matters, and retired with the satisfaction of having made 11 confusion wnme confounded." Candidates were dodging here and there during tho recesses, plotting, tricking, wisely winking, baiting traps and (riggers; and seemed to sutler and to sorrow iu their ardor, that nature had not conferred upon them the powers of ubiquity, especially for that (to them) most interesting occasion. It would have en a course ol study, iroin A 1 C to the graduating ploma, for one who desired lo make n mnster of him- elf in Ihe mysteries of political manceiivreing aud parly trickery, the only stumbling block in the whole routine of study (aud that n small atVair iu the premi es), nemg the obscurity nt that Lihulous thing called political honesty. to close this prelude, there was no lack of honest intent on the part of many compos nip mat unnveution harmony, and concession tu obtain hurtnony. beiuifthe aim of manv, especially amons ihe hoary old battlers of tho rural regions. 1 he Convention was called to order at ten oV hick. A. M-, by appointing Dr. Geo. W. Fries as President, md Messrs. Wilson nnd Shroyor a Secretaries. Un motion, tho Secretaries ca led the names of the lelegutes, commcticinB at the First Ward of thecitv. who came forward and took their Beats iu the order of the mil. Tne names wore called from the publiBhed list iu the Eurpiirer of Saturday. When the names of ihe delegates of tho Seventh Ward were called, as given in said paper, each man answered and took hi sent, when Mr. Johnson f fam- oiib in the contested Senatorial case of Broadwell and iluiBoii) rose and asked why his name had not been alh d, aud others rose and demanded the same of the President. The President stated that the names hud been called by the Secretary h they had been otficinlly furnished to the Convention. Mr. Johnson mounted the stand unon which the Pre sident, Secretaries and reporter stood, and iu a loud voice proceeded to assert the claim of himself and col ognes to a seat in that Convention. I Shouts of " move him !"" turn him out " knock him down '" " go it, Johnson j we'll stand by you!" hisses, hoots, huwis, neerB, and all manner ol noises Irom nil sides oulatde aii-1 inside. In the midst of this confusion, Mr. Jnhn son gave his voice its fullest pitch, like Byron' trum peter, to urown one noise with a iiote still greater, aud snid he was bound to be heard. He was a man that would not submit tu have his rights trampled on with mpuniiy, ana as he claimed a n- ht to a Heat in that Convention, he was determined lo be heard. Ho had Ins ceriihrate of election as a delegate, and that was bound in be respected considered at least and not kicked out. He had been chosen a delegate hv a meet- ug nt the lime and place set forth hv the Executive ommtitee, and he and his colleagues had the nuly ght to represent the Seventh Ward iu the Convention, le saw the inotjw of the movement; it was apparent to all. The frwf delegate did not suit a certain faction, and hence that faction, having the numerical strength, would kick them out. He was not to be put down by ivado, or bullied by out of his seat without a hear ing, and he demanded lhat the tinmen of himself and olleogueB be called. Here a trnmendous uproar was ruined on all sides. iu the midst of which numbers of scuts broke down, which added to I ho confusion, and " outsiders " milled iu from all ipiarters, yelling like aboriginals on a high pree.j Mr. Johusoii strove to continue, although nearly over whelmed by the hurrah, aud ihe President screamed for order, and Mr. Johnson screamed to be heard, and amidst a hurricane nf hoots and hisses, mainly directed at Mr. Johnson, with a sprinkle at tho President, the latter commanded Air. J- to take his seat, and Mr. J. refused. Mr. Johnson contended that he hud a right to speak. That the body before him was not a Convention, hut a mil's of men in a state of organization, nnd lhat ihe ob ject ol calling' the names ol delegates was in ascertain ho were entitled In seals, and he and his colleagues had a rihttolhe place In which they had been elected, and to assert their claims thereto. This was not the fust time he hail ton lit fur a seat, (alluding to (he rase in the Senate;) he hud stood up iu the tire before, ami mid not surrender at dia'-retiou nuw. (ured up roar ) President Take your seat, sir. Mr. Johnson I will be heard, sir. aud will Bland up to uiv rigliis in spite of nil bravado. President -ton shall ail down, sir. I ami placed ro to preside, (aildresaiue the delegates.) and I Will uminUiii the dignity and authority of my position at ery iiauni. Mr, Johnson endeavored to continue, and the Con ni ion seemed upon tho verge of an insurrectionary iiitbieak, when the President wired Mr. J. by the col lar and endeavored Iu force him from the stand. TIih movement had ao etl" -el fur a moment thai threat ened a breakine up of the Convention, nnd, probably, sin h would have been (ho result, hut for ihe coolness it some prudent men. In ihi demonstration canea wen; r.'iiM'd, "hi'lit: ' was rrpd hv the " outsiders, and Mr. Win. Hunter, one of the patriarchs ot the par ty, rus heit torwan to all Ike ftir. .loimsim with us cane. ha vint' it raised, iu the air with thai hostile intent, his L'luwin tu red wrath aud his eves Hashing destruc tion lo "contentious apiritB." Several persons rufhru iu and prevented the " mow, Cries uf " move him," mug on every side, and Mr. Philip Weaver, oilO o( the disputed delegates, cnllie fivr- waid and loudlv accused Mr. Hunter with having de serted (ieii. Cass two yenmiKO because the Democrats repined to elect him Auditor, aud denounced him as Whig who had no rihitobeiu that Convention! Thus mailers went on for about littecii minutes, when it was jected members were elected, woaheld before the time, and wun composed of but a dozen or so, who had hurried up to get the whip hand of the people. . Alfuiri at this ooiut threatened Muolher outbreak, wiieu Mr. Frois, the President, suggested that the difficulty with the Seventh Ward be Daaaed over for the pres entthat Iwth delegations take their aeatt, and that wo-ir ngui to tne same be a matter or luture action. This was acceded to, aud the Clerk proceeded with the call. When the names of the Ninth Ward members were called, a Hibemiau outside of the rope jumped up and aid, " Mr, President, I resaved two hundred votes in the bloody Ninth, und 1 claim a sate, too." Laughter, but no olhcial action or reference.! After the roll had been fully called, tho vacancies iu mo ueieoanon tilled, and all tho members had taken their seats, Mr. Noble, from the Sixth Ward, moved lhat a Com mittee of one from each Ward and Township be ap- pomieu to uralt rules lor the (iovernmeut ot the uon veiimui. Carried. Mr. Black, of Columbia, moved that a Committee of one Irom each Ward and Township be also appointed, tn settle the difficulty of the disputed seals in the Seventh Ward. A member objected to the iitiiiitiiitment of another uimutee mr trie purpose, rle moved that tne committee on Rules Im einonWHreil tn anltle the ueildillU difficulty, Mr. Black snid that if this malter was referred to the Committee on Kuloa, the business could not soon be done, lor Unit w hich they had already iu their bunds, was sufficient to occupy more than all the time-which the Convention had to sprire. The day is now more than half gone, and things promise anything but a rapid progress of business, and as this matter is a delicate one, it will reipiire delicate and careful investigation, und persons and papers will have to be sent for. I am one nt that Committee, and I am not willing to lake this matter upon my hands, in connection with Ihe other business before us. Sir, appoint a special Committee, for I assure you lhat I for one will sit it out until January next, before I will consent to report against any of the patties, without the fullest investigation. Both tho delega'ioua came here certified to, ami I will never consent to anv uf them hcinir hooted nut like dogs, or summarily disposed of without a fair trial and a full investigation as to their right to act as delegates, and such investigation cannot be had iu ihe Committee on Rules a committee appointed for a special pur- After some sharo shootinir from meinhnrann nil aidna. the motion to refer tho subject to the Committee on Rules prevailed. Our Reporter understood that Mr. Black withdrew irom the committee. Mr. Israel Brown moved that llin emmnittee hnvo letivo io withdraw to prepare their report, which mo tion prevailed, wlun the Convention adjourned to meet at 1 o'clock F M. A few minutes after the adjournment the rain com menced coming down iu u manner that would have astonished the nut ives in ihe days of the A rk, and it continued until night. The water found its way through the roof of the Convention shed, and spoiled all the " documents," and completely deluged the dinner hv hlcB, which were placed under a long shed as antiquated as the town itself, the clap-boardB upon Ihe roof of which hod become so attenuated as lo pass for specimens of laths of early ages, the crevices between them being wider than the space which the occupied. One half the guests eat their dinners with umbrellas over their heads, while the other hull, in their unsheltered and hungered anxiety, drowned themselves nnd fiahed among thedislies for provender cost, fifty cents a head, water thrown in' At Bickhnm's, things were rather more comfortable. People there wot a good dinuer. without the extra ol a duck At two o'clock the Convention met at Bickham's, and the committee reported rules, and resolution against Ihe reception of (he " auclmmitioii" d,.Pi-nt nf the 7th Ward, all of which were adopted when, on nc- , uuiit mi iuw tiiuiiiiiit-u inclemency oi me weniner, tne Convention adjourned to meet iu Cnlleire Hull, iu this city to-day at 10 o'clock. Alter the adjournment, a hunt nccuued in the rnad between n number of (he "outsiders," aud it extended among the crowd until nearly a hundred persons were engaged iu it at ihe same time, with stones, cones, clubs, and oilier weapons. The coolness and determination of 'Squire Taylor, of the city, and of Sheriff Cooper, auu m.ea rarmeie, wuo plunged into the nudit id it, iiuasaiicd, to maintain the iwace, preveuted serious con sequences. A it was,severa! jwisonswereinjured, iu a young man named Moor, n member ot the Wes ru r ire Company, was shot throuith the lee. This Irnt BB had no party origin, or any connection with the affairs of the Convention. Another I WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 4. 1850 Our Board of Health. I As will be seen by this day's report, tho gentlemen composing tliti body reaigu their office, and retire from iheir arduous and weunsnme labors, there being, in (heir upiuiou, no farther neeessity for their services iti that capacity. While we congratulate our fvlluw-uiti zens un the restoration ofjjcalth egaiu to our city, we teel that we but express their united wice in tender ing to the Bourd of Health the sincere thanks of this community for the faithfulness and diligence they have manifested in the discbarge of the humane but onerous dutiea of their at at ion. We congratulate I hem, also, ou the termination of their nbors, and trust they will, in the duo appreciation of their services by their fi lhw-citiens, find that reward which pecuniary compensation cuuuot furnish. B V tHSA OUVAl,. A gluuce at the pum Gen. Ilamer. " Resolved, That we have seen with regret, lor tome time past, that there was a hard money fm iioii growing up in Ohio, who are opposed to all' banks of eircii-luiiou, and whose doctrines, if carried out, in the .present condition of the people, mult be rninoti- to the best interests of the community, especially to the whole debtor class, who will be orushed by a policy so .alal and deatruc ive. " Resolved, That it is high time for the people to lao their utliiirs into their own hands, and that so loii" Uf they entrust them to reckless dumagogues or to violent, ultra politicians of any par-y7Hil the industrious, busi ness classes ot the community must he thesunerers." The above are twoof several resolutions offered by the lute lamented Gen, Thus. L. Hamer, of Brown county, to a Democratic meeting at West Union, on tho 2oth of March, 18(2, and which were published in Ihe I had never seen a fairy her own self, but " Elsie the " I will i.-ll you, l have heard a ravo divine amy that Hod has two dwellings, one in heaven and the other iu a mesk uul thankful heart; which Almighty (Jod grant to nie ami to my honeat chohtr." Iiaak Walton. " How did you find them nil at home, Bridget f " "Hearty, ma'am, thank ye;" and the girl moved busily about (he room. She was my chambermaid and although she had only lived with me a short time, 1 felt very much attached to her, lor he whs so kind, industrious aud honest. Soon after she cume to us I was seized with a painful illness, and during it, she nursed me with the tenderness of a sister; often, when the spasms of ocuto pain would shake my feeble body, I hail seen large tears standing in her full, round eye. as she assisted me iu undrcasmtr. I observed that she was not in her usual spirits, and when she bunded me my dressing guwn, I saw thai herhandstrombled. But sue patiently went through every little duty, although I could well see that she wns suffering from some hidden trouble. When I sat down to my reading, she h fi .... ... p.iru mr me Bonn tea tor, dear reader, I tun a true obi maid, and love my cup of lea, as well as 1 love my existence ulmnsl. Presently she re-entered, and rolling a little teupoy beside my chair, she placed on it the waiter and, poured out my ,ea. Just then I heard ibn henw hronthinv ot my dear Aunt Mary, who was asleep iu the adjoining room. oiose the door ol Aunt Mary's room, my good Bridget," I said ; " and while ilrink n,v t,'H. Mini ant Ihii nice piere of limit you have Hindu ills, come and tell me anmetliilig altout Ireland." I knew tlii, woiild pli-aiu, Iter, fnrofton liad ihe talked bi tne at night, when I would be uudn iiiitig, abnitt the EtleiiH and vali nf lieitntifnl.iiniis.hii,,,..! nnlrnt,,a and the lalrn-i, with thwrrouud rili((. in tin, gra. She -th.rw''i,1'"''."'1 "f !! "ilj . But cum, the ,., ,h Inventory nlgnod, mat WOh her ll.nni- tx-na U . tn iiih mid wnrkpd . lliiioeet.t HnA.,..t'. i.e.. '' . $ . ,' :gested, (mid agreed to,) that all the delegates agnin retire, and that another call ol the Ml he had To exphuu the matter which gave rise to (he above dilVi.-iilty, we copy the following parnproph from a mor ning ueiuocraiic paper t "Alter (his temporary organization wns had. a call of (he names of (he Delegates to the Convention trom Ihe various wards and townships was gone into, and proceeded harmoniously until (he call of the seventh ward w hen two separate sects nf Del gH tea elnimed to rei-rcseid dial ward. One party having met at the hour named lor Hie call ot the primary meeting ot the ward, proceeded to elect a delegation by acclamation, and adjourned. Another party at erward met at tlio same phit e, and selected their delegates The Clerk aaain proceeded to rail the roll, when A uicmh'T rose and said that he had observed that iieuilv all iho confusion, doubt leas intended lo mar ihe progress of (he Convention in iis business, wns ncca-uu!icdhv Whigs who were mingled in and around the bodv. He would therefore move that a acrficanl-at- arms be elected to exclude all who did not act with the party A person suggested tuai me mover ne mane sergeant iit-anus. La lighter, j A rope was suggested lo be stretched Irom tree to live nmund (he around occupied hv tho deleeales. aud some ructions members expressed iheir dialike to he- iug " roped in ; " but the rope was procured and put up, and the motion tn elect a serges nt-at-nrm declared oill ol oilier. The Secretary proceeded to calhhe roll, when a del-1 egatc sngtiesteti that th- county members take their seats on the left, and ihe city members on tho riitht. A member horn one of the townships objected, and comic illy suggested tht as the country hail always been ripht, and never had been divided into fnctiotu, it wa in respect entitled to the " right" in this case. Auoitu T inemner tnougm n uninir inai uie ciiv tiie. atinn should occupy the front Beat and (he delegates from die country thrown in the back ground. Theub-jeclion were finally settled lo mutual satisfaction, nnd the rail ol Ihe roll proceeded, Hie delegates InKiiitf their seats as the roll was called, and vacancies being filled as each ward auu mwusiup came in. When lh seventh ward came on iu its order, the old lid, as published in tho Enquirer was called, and (tin members took (lieir seals. Mr. P. Weaver.nl the rejected delegation, demanded that hi name should be called, as he hud been du ly elected. Hooting, hissing and uproar, generally. tie was hound to on neani to nave a cimuce mr ins .ftt but would never submit to being kicked mil of it, Mr. Wiley McLean said ho would he heard, and was not one of the kind lo be either howled or clinked down. He hud been apjHtiuied a delegate iu accor-dniiee with tlm order nf (he Executive Committer ; ihe meeting hud been held at the proper hour ; he had and his colleagues hud been elected at the proper time, and those w ho now were permitted to take their icnts, had been appointed at a subsequent meeting, contrary lo all rule, to gain a selfish end. A member stated that the meeting by which the re- Harmonious" Demonstra tion. There has been a very interesting war growing up between the hards and the softs in the Perry and Hocking Distrut. Mr. Cose, tho delegate to the cuu- atitiitiptml Convention, would not go the hard, and therefore the Somerset and Lancaster paper mounted him rough shod. The Hocking paper defended him. The affair waxed warm, und now there is a kind of iiiiciiou in callutj; each other such amiable uaiues as villains, scoundrels, forgers, &c. file toilo.ving from the Hocking Sentinel, the Loco pupor of that county, shows off the latest plan to gel up a little political capital. We should naturally think that Bonn-body had got their foot in it: L'npsnmllrleil Forgery The following appeared iu the Perry County Demo crat of August I, aud iu the Ohio Eagle f July 30. " HOUSE RAISING MEETING." At a raising on Ihe farm of Itichaid Green, about M miles from the town of Logan, on the 27 Ih day of July, IH.r0, a Inruu number of Democrats were present, and after the building was completed, they determined on having a meeting, and, on motion, Richaid Green wa ppoiutPil eliaiiiuaii, and ll-iber! Lnrreo Secretary. Uiimutiouol tt. Uurreu, 1,. f . Urakk addressed the meeting in a speech ot about one hour, and strenuous ly advocated the principles of democracy, showing lear auu coucliiBivelv that the Democrat werenghlou every subject they advocated. Alter the address wa oncliided. the following resolutions were passed- Ktsotvtd, 1 hut we approve the position taken by Mr, Drake on the 4tb day of July, in a speech made by him on lliut day. iu the town ol Logun, and believe the sumo meets the approbation of a huge majority of the democrats ol Hoi king. Hrtolprd, That the proceed iocs of this meetiiiR be published in the Hocking Sentinel, Perry Co. Demo crat, Ohio hagle, and Ohio Ktnteainaii. RICHARD GREEN, Fres't. Robert Chirsn. Y As aoon as we saw the above iu said paper we pro nounced ii a Forgery- We kuew (hat it was usual to pohliah Jtrtf iu (he paper in tho coiimy where meetlujja held. It was never presented Here, nnu why ' Ue- cause we should have detected ihe forger at once. Here is the I Preef of Forte ry. I certify that 1 was Secretary of a nicotine called al K. Green's, alter raising a toimcco house, on ihe 27th Inly that said meeting was designed as a jest (hat uboui Yi voters were present uo resolutions were ptia- I no authority to publish ever given 1 never saw any proceedings of said meeting in mamiscriptor print until I saw them in the Perry County Democrat ol Au gust 1st, which l never signed or nutlmmed to be sign ed as Secretary. liUHrin i UUnitriX Au iru M II. IH..I). Mr. Curren is a man uf high character for integrity and may be implicitly relied upon. vn will not attempt to guess wnu is tne auinor oi tne infamous forgery but iho public ought lo know the criminal, inr a man who would du so, would rob a hen roost, sheep fold, or meat house, and in ht-halt of our c iti ens, we demand ot the hditor nt ihe Kngle ami Democrat the uamu of the nifty individual. It is due to our jteople, and to the reader of said pners, lhat the public may know who is (ceding the columns at said papers, aud imposing on their readers such Roar-1 oaens. ne asa nam papers innucr io give me prom ui the fraud tu their readers. Let your readers know the facts, and let the public have the name of ihe wretch. Ohio Statesman on the 19th of April of (he same y They wereudopted by that meeting, as the deliberate convictions of the Democracy in thai part of Ohio at that time, and no doubt embodied the views and feelings of a large majority of that parly throughout the Stute. t A short timo after this, tho Locofoco party threw off tho thin disguise of " Bank Reform," and boldly plant ed themselves on the hard money idea. But utter defeat awaited them, and for some years thi issue has. been withheld. In the January Convention, 1850, the subject was again introduced, and resolutions of the mont decided character were adopted. At the July , Convention the question wns again rnised, and, though some few men tried to avert tho storm and prevent (ho ' adoption of these measures, yet the hards prevailed, ! and resolutions, which will be found at the bend of this paper, were carried. The Locofoco party in Ohio have planted themselves openly on this issue. The people of the State are called upon to sanction this doctrine at the polls. Judge Wood atuuds before the people, claim-ing their nffroges for Governor on this issue. Members of the two branches of the Legislature are tu be elected on this issue. Tho result of the electiun this fall, whatever may be set up, will declaimed, and with a show of justice, us a verdict of the people on this issue. Of course, in this trial, every freeman is a juror. He should know the whole case. He should understand the practical effects and bearings nf the incisure. To eunble those who do not agree with us upon moat questions tn form nn enlightened opinion, we have Introduced tho resolutions of Gen. Hamer. We know he had much inlluence over many members of the parly wilh which he acted. They have been in the habit of at least considering his opinions. Wc ask the people to do it now. If they had weiifht in 1842. thev have equal weight now. The facts stated and the positions assumed are of just ns rnucb importance to ihe great mass of the people now as then. Upon ihis question he waa clearly right. He saw, as every man of ordinary sagacity must see, that the adoption of the hard money rule would effectually and utterly ruin a large and meritorious class of community. The laboring clnises the men in all kinds of business who hapeu to be in debt, who are so unfortunate us not to be bom of rich parents and with gold spoons iu their mouths these classes must be crushed by the adoption of the ardiual principle of the Locofoco party in Ohio as pro mulgated in their articles of faith. People of Ohio farmers, mechanics, lalioring men of alt nlsMta pr,,f. ions in yu the appeal is now made, and the day of decision draws nifh. ive week from lo-ilay, you will be called upon lo decide this is sue ut the ballot-box. Be not deceived by false professions. Do not permit yourselves to he lulled asleep by (he ass urn nee that there is no disposition nu the part of these hard-money men to enforce theirdoctnne if they gel the power. That will be a poor ph a when the blow comes. If you dei t re ruin if you courl destnu lion if you an sick of your present prosperity, and wish to come down to the price of laborers in hard money countries (hen the mud is plain, the course is clear. Von have only to go to ihe polls, vote for Wood and for Locofoco legislators, and you have done your part to bring ii sIhiiii. Let Wood be elected Governor let a majority of Loco foe os lie returned to the Legislature, and what w ill be said und claimed by our opponents T Wilt they not, at once, proclaim that tie people of Ohio have pro nounced un an issue, fairly made, that they are op-toacd to any other currency than gold and silver; mid that henceforth there shall be no other allowed tu Ohio Will not the members of the constitutional Conven tion, when (hey come together in December, say lhat the people of Ohio hud ratified the report of Mr. Lar- will, und had decided lhat then should be a clause in the now constitution j'ortver pronibiting ull batiks in Ohio r Of course they will. We desire that the will nf the majority um prevail We ciui stand the haid moiioy reign if it must come, a well us the must o people. We only desire that there should be n fair expression of views. This can only be obtained by our citizens vpting upon this linn I money issue as they desire that issue to be decided. ask I hem to consider the views of Geu. llainer. We Hsk them to reflect uikiu tho kffkct which the preva lence of the hard money idea curried out, will have on the prosperity of the State generally, and upon that of the individuals lhatcomjKJse the Stale. The Home Department The Wheeling Times recommends Hon. Joseph K. Chandler, of Philadelphia, fur Secretary of the Interior. By the way, the Times says, (he dutissof this of fice are very complicated, aud under present arrange meiits, discharged wilh great difficulty. There is uo building adupted to its usea, where the machinery of the office can be well arranged. The Secretary is iu one huildiug, and hia heads uf bureaus scattered all over that city of maguificem distances, with uo power ot constant consultation, without great iiiiouveuieuco. Under these circumstance, such au office would be a living death, aud Mr. McKeunan, with hia constitution, could lint possibly perform the duties of his ollice Hamilton county will do her duty, of course. She has nothing to prevent a majority, for the vvh .le ticket, of leu thousand. Let her democracy imitate the hur inouy and euerirctio action exhibited hv (he democracy iu other tails of the State, and she will cume up to Unit ligiirn, So mote it bv'otntttman What aimut huinbnggery to talk in this way. Hamilton county give ten thousand ma,oril) for the hard money ticket The Statoaman knows better. It 1b wilfully and delibemiety attempting to deceive aud gull it followers. Iu the preseut distracted taie ol the Locofocos there, if they get aiy majority at nllp Correspondence of tfaa Jourual.) Locofoco Nomination Free Rollers Over hoard. Mkdika, August 11, I8,'0. Mh. Bascox. The " United Douiifcmcy " held their Convention, for uominetioii of county ticket, to-day, and by iray of private talk) a most beautiful time they had The Old Hunkers had every thing their own way, while their now allies (tho Simon Pure Free S oilers) looked on with pious resignation. All tho nomination were from the old line Locofocos, viz: For Representative Jamki C. John so;. ( member in 1848-9); For AudttorCki.fitt B. Piunths, (Locufoco ex- postmaster at Medina); For Sheriff Gkohok W. Jordan, (an unmitigated Lo cofoco) ; For C(iaiwnoai Joaihab SiNMoat,(same as last above.) All resolutions which did not square with regular Lecofocaism were laid on the table without ceremony us well aa all resolutions shewing opMisition Ui Judge Wood. Some of tlio old Liberty party men bolted out right, while nil looked sore atnur-ement. The proba bility it that the Liberty men and Free Soilere willcall another Convention. Hy the way, a resolution was in troduced, recommending a clause iu the new Constitution prohibiting " Banks of disjountaud circulation." The minutes of the Secretary show that the resolution passed, but it will probably bo suppressed entirely, or " laid on Ihe table." iu the published pi-mot-dmus. I have said lhat every thing not squaring with regulnr Locntocoisut waa laid on the uinie. i nere tuny, per-Imiia. have bemi uiie or two exceptions, in reaiild to a resolution iu favor of universal suffruKe, &c which barely squtettd through. The Convention refused tn indorse Chase, w hile tlioy warmly eulogized Tom Beu- toll. In the midst of nl this " noise nnd confusion" iu the ureal Free Soil Democratic Family, the Whifii remain, lor (be present, perfectly qnirt, not liking to interfere in family difhcultiiu until' tho lime cornea lor doing good. The prospect now is. that the no munition of Smith will help Judge Johnston nu uie m awrs neaervi' In Inoite, yours, etc L'hild ' her sister had. ami tlm "Uul boduV m aim -n. ed the fairy, had pinched the po. r ' wean Elsie." Then again ou Sunday, or holvduy nights, she would tell me how, when a child, she hud wished to tin n nun and that she would go out in the dark, pitch nivht. and kneel ou Ihe emuud iu the middle of their irarden. nnd usk the good Virgin and thu Saints to prny for her for 11.1.1 I.... ..I I 1- ' J iiiwiiyn linen a reunions gin. Then she had actually heard the Bensbeo crv. It came wailing around the house when her father died ; and she had heard it a week before his death, when he wasluiie and hearty, Sin- hud heard it at night-hill one evening when she was crossing tho glen below their cottage, as she wu coining from Colernino, where she had been spending the day with her grandmother. It commenced "low and mournful like" in iho bushes beside her, and then mimed around the hills, swelling out louder and louder, until it ceased behind the cot- As she would dwell on this, my fancy would pteinro to me thu enthusiastic, imaginative Irish nirl, standing with lips apart, listening to the mournful wail-iug uight-wiiiil, which her alter in tub lea shaped into tho sad poetical Benhcc ; mid if 1 had had the skill of uti artist. I would have made a lov ly sketch, 1 am sure; mr io plainly did her descriptions bring before me her figure and the surrounding Ian Iscnpc, lightened with the warm hue of the linjeriuc twiliirlit so peculiar to Ireland. Bridget Bat down ou the rus beside me. and when we went to bed that night, good reader, it was later than u nana pec tin it Aunt Murv imagined : but 1 hd heard all Bridget's troubles, had soothed aud comforted her, hud read her lover's last letter to her for Bin-had a lover what girl has not? and sent her tu bed with u heart considerably lighter than when, with aching head but patient fingers, she had prepared my nice uigui meai. Bridget's father. Dermot Kei-evnn. was n Senn lnimn by birth, but of Irish parentage. His father had set tled in Glasgow, nnd (hero did Dermot spend his early years, and obtain thriitiuess und steadiness, qualities not often found in an Irishman. Dermot was early apprenticed to a ganliuer, and when he waa out of his term of service, his mauler recommended hiui to an ln-.ll gentleiiiau, who wanted a gardner for his place, "The Forest," atColeraiue, There Dermot came, and it was not long before he brought home to his pr-tty gardner's-cottage, the beauty ut Colemiue, Grace Mullen, who he hail persuaded to be his " bonnie wife." as lie called her. Tboy must have been very happy for sweeter domestic pictures 1 have never heard descri bed, either in tale or poem, than my good Bridget would sketch iu her little stories of their home, durinc her lather's iile. hut this blessed happiness could uot Inat forever. One hue spring day poor Dermot w,;s bronchi home from the imrdeu. no nt " the areut house." on n litter, nearly deud. He had fallen from a high tree while lopping off a brunch. He lingered only a few hours, leaving the lonely widow with her "lour childer," to bidtlu wilh life aloiie. Bridget was Ihe eldest, aud she wns only twelve. I lien there Waa Grace, aud fciUit,, nml hulM Jinnv. the baby to be eared for. Bridiret waa sent m her unele'a at Glasgow town, and the tfrund toother ol Uraes Here- vhii gave the shelter nf tier poor roof to the rest of ineiii. lviiniw nerevno oponeu a nine shop iu ner grandmother's front room, and did bits of work for the people all arouud Coleruiue," a Bridget expres- ll'U II. A year after tho kind, levins father's death, home came Bridget from Glasgow town. Heruucle, the rich distiller, was en rayed at her. for she bad told hi wile that she hud rather starve iu Ireland than un tn the meeting house all day Sunday, and sit straight upat her sewing and knitting the rest ol the week. Poor girl ! the strict, rigid habits of her uncle's llirihy Scokb wife had driven Iter almost frantic. Sho, who had roamed ut will, over hill aud glen, and who had never been bound down lo any duty. Tho domestic affairs of her own home had always been soon dispensed with, and sue nan spent most oi mr time rambling through, the forest, or by the siruiun-side, or playing with (jrocey, Elsie, and the baby, chasing their shadows on ihe grns-sy hill-side i then how could she hear the strait-laced notions aud riles uf her notable Scotch aunt T Not at all, and she told her so ; and the Y sent ber home Ut the starvation her aunt had often taunted her with, holding it in perspective, when she would lie rebellious. The mother, grandmother, and children crowded around her. Grace h'erevau held her child, from whom she had been so long parted, close tu her bosom, and xouoed wun joy. " And so,' said the old grandmother, "the 'Scotch quean, as poor Dermot used in say, told ve we starved hero f Never mind, dnrlint, you shall always have a p raiy, even U we all do without." Poor Bridget worked early and lute for the farmers' wives, but she only made a "small thriHe," a she satd, and sometimes they were so poor lhat they had scarcely a potntou apieco in the house. " And did you ever wish your If bark in Glasgow town, Bridget f " I inquired. " Nivor ma'am," was the girl's energetic answer; and I do not believe she ever did, for the eeniid light uf home-love shone iu her poor, Irish home, lor whirl) her li'tle affectionate heart had piin d, under the wealthier but cold root of her uucie. Thin I came tn Aiueriky." " But, Bridget, how came you to think of America T" " Och, the sirli all around talked id tout Amerikv. and my aunt s cousin s nusimnd s Bister writ home a letie ui mti t her imkiiii; sich a power ol money. Well. talked lo mother about it, but she cried, and so did grandmother, and they asked uie where I'd set t he our pound to pay my passage with. lhat kept me piiet a tut, tor t ii niver Been bo biir a heap ol money But one day, when 1 w is sh ikuitr up urmidmoihcr bed, I felt a great big lump in it, that wns sewed up in ine sniiw, ami t dragged it out, anu it was mi old stock ing with money tied in it. 1 ran scream in' with toy to mother. But och, how she cried and grandmother scolded. Then 1 cried, ton, and grandmother came and hugged me, and told me to give over cry in, that there wa ihe money if 1 wanted it. She said she 'd hid it away in the bed, years a gone, tu keep off the narit uay. ltieu I cried, it rand mot her, let me no till Amenky, and I II send ye so much sold lhat keep the dark day away forever,' " Then mother said, ' Lei the girl gn, for sur she had light given her, ami she ktmWa heller than us, " Old you nt leel a utile sorry, Bridget, when the; gave up at lustl " 1 asked. " Nu mn am, not a bit," she continued ; " aud I hur ried around and got ready. The girl thai had writ the letter homo abuut Aiueriky, sent nut a ticket tu her sister tu cume nn thu vessel that was just going ; but she Rosy McLu nail all it was was very sick, and could n't got and so mother bought her ticket lor me Hut, och, when mother mu me good bye, and kiased me, and letl me nn ihe vessel, then 1 cried. 1 did n I cry a bit when I bid grandmother and the childer good bye at the house, but it wa when 1 saw mot tier vning town the Bideut (he vessel, and get into ihe. tumbling little boat, that I cried. 1 fell oo lonely like, just a 1 did when father wa buried; and I watched the little boat, mid her red cloak, until she got ashore. I lien there she stood, aud shook her handkerchief until it gruwed too dark to see her. Orh, Miss Emm, but then ried all to my so 1 1 though tor 1 wa ashamed tne that was her (Mine was kind tome, and worked with mewhi-n she could, and took good care of my money which she put all away, and I didn't spend a uuo rue no me ol tier old dresses and an ota 'emu, so i saved up all my money for four months, men 1 writ my lirstletter lo mother, und sent her the niAiweu UOIiaiB. MOh Hridgot!" I exclaimed, "why did you not write before?" The girl laughed miietly, and replied, "I wanted to send a big bit of money when I writ home ; and I know'd the neighbors would stare, and grandmother would open her eyes, and mother would be so proud nf her Bridget send in' home three pound and oyor. Then came a letter Irom them at home and it made me cry so. They were all well, and had got my money;- but mother tried to scold a hit bekuse I badn t writ before, but she was so placed to hear lliut . ...... u,-,u wen, unit sue did u t scold mucn. ineni worked on, but I felt lonely like, and kept thinkin' how me 'twould ho tu have Gmcey with me. So I saved up twenty dollars, and sent it to Irelaud; and jeon Gracey camo tome. Mother couldn't come, I know'd for grandmother was so old us lo stay in bed nil the time. I 'd hevn a year in Ameriky when Gracey came over; then after awhile 1 sent for Elsie, for the times were still harder in Ireland, and mother had bud work to get ou with her poor old sick granny lo nurse. Elsie seemed so little when she cauio, that 1 didn't know what todo wilh her; but Mrs. Hill, (he kind soul, said she might come and live with me; that sho could piny with ihe childer, and rock the ciitdle, and (6 errands, and she would give her her clothes the first year; then, if she was smart, she would give her a half dollar a week for Mr. Hill wa richer now. 1 tni k great pleasure in Elsie, she was good and minded 1 me ; but Gracey was headstrong like, aud would have her own way. She gave me a dale of trouble, and many 'a the night I've laid awnke ond thought about uer. one liked to tno me, and mnke me believe she was worse than she wns. " At lust Mr. Hill and his wife made up their minds to buy a large farm clear up in the country, a great many miles oil' from Philadelphia, and EIbio and me went with them. This did fin.e.-v ,fmd. mid she Wns n belter girl ever nfierward, for when she wob left nloiie in Philadelphia, she saw how cross she 'd been in ine, and thi made her sorry ; mid she wut to church rigilar, ami attended to her duties, nnd used to go and talk lo my good old priest, Father Shane, for he writ about it to me, unbeknownst to her och, but I waa gbid thin, " Alter I'd been in the c juutry on the farm I mane a letter came from mother, telling us of pour grand - n.Muit-1 s ueam, anil ine letter had nil tears over it, which made Elsie and me cry, for we know'd they were jHMir mother's terns. In this same letter she said she wished wo could send her a ticket to cume to Ameriky with; that if ihe could only see her Bridge, once more belore she died, she would behuonv. This Was spring-time, so I takes un Elsie's money and mina. and gnea off Ui Philadelphia to buy a ticket for mother und show Gracey mother's letier. Gracey had no mon ey to give me, (or she was ulways exiravugaiit ; and no wonder, for he was pretty, like mother, and liked a bit of finery better than plain folks like myself. She cried about it, but I comforted her, and (old her niver un lid, I'd enough ; but 1 couldn't buv mvaelf adress that I did n't let her know though for fenr she'd fret. So I bought the ticket, aud got Father Shane to write a letter for me. I was going tu stay in Philmlel Ida a week ao Mrs. Hill said I might; but the day er I bought Ihe tjjket. a waifoil came nil tho WrtV from the lat in to tell me Elsie was dying that she had kuueu tie- day 1 letl, und find thu meases. Then again,. Miss huua, I waa in trouble, for Elie waa so good, aud nlie looked like fa I her. Och, I cried a'l the way out tn Mrs. Hill's. Sun-enough, when I gut there my poor baby was m-ar gone. I nuraed her night aud day, poor child, but 'twas uo use, God took my wean awiiv from me. The night ihe died "ho oieued hereyesand know'd for the first time. I thought she was getting well, ugh the doctor suid she couldn't. ' Bridget," siz she, " we'd a nice nl iv down in the leu, hadn't we ! " ' I could n't answer, my heart was so full, for I auw lie thought idle waa home iu Colemiue. " ' Bridget 1 him called, and held not her little hands to me. I took her iu my. arms, cry in' all the tune. Let's go into the cottage,' siz she, for father and grundmotle-r have been callin' us a good many times. snarK nut here, fidget, and cold hold me, Bridget, ar, for I can't see,' Then she culled ' mother! ' and try in' tn nut her little arm around my neck, said she wanted to go to sleep, and told me to sing to her. I hugged her close up lo me, aud nfter a few words about the long grass the tout ot the hill by the cottage, where she and nor used to roll over plnvin'. sIki drew n lone breath. and as I ki-wd iier, she died. Ooh, but th il was tin darkest niht I Iver spent, Mias Eioh. 1 was ull alone, for Mrs. Hill had gone to sleep, iclliu' uie I must call her if Elsie was worse. There I sat all night oldm my dead dnrlint close to my bosom, ton heart- truck to cry. Bui when in the morning Mrs. Hill tried to lake her from me, they any i screamed und held on lo tier like a mad person. " 1 niver saw Elsie afterward, Mia Euiia," said tin poor girl, with tear stroamiug down her rhecks, " for when they buried her iu (he cold earth, 1 was raving sick, and they said I would die too. Part of the time know d tlo-m, and pari of tti time I was cmy, but A New Fntliy The already largo family of Pnlhyshavereoeived an addition to their number, lo the form uf a young broth er from Swoden, by the name uf Viucstpaihy, .or the cure of diseases by ipecific active movements. The method consists iu npplyiug friction, motion, percussion, Ate, to thu internal organs, by a corresonding aeriuu Ihey will do well. But, to cover up this difficulty, the 0,1 1 ha rl'ac of the body. By lung practice, the pro- Statesman resort to its usual argument, and brags as loud as if confident or success. Ten thousand majority Murder am) suicides iu connection, seem tu be very frequent thi year. John Figg shot a girl named Spika-well, iu Louisville, un Wvdusday last, aud then shot himself. Mr. Gist enumerates 102 churches in Cincinnati. Suvaral large church edifices are uow erecting. people should see me, and 1 went off lo my Ihde b lessors of this art claim to lnna discovered the precise spot ou the external surfaoe, where a nudge, a blow, a rub, Ac, must tie given lojog. jar, quicken or slacken the motion of the brain, heart, liver, spleen, or any other organ, its operations may be corrected, and made to conform tu the lawsof health. This new art oliims great success whore it has been practiced, as In Stockholm for forty years, and uV affecta produced approve the plau. 1 and cried all night ; for I (bought 1 wns fuitlor away from them than lather was, for he waa iu heuveii, aud I wus uut on the wide waiher. Then 1 thought of what father used to tell me about God leiu' with us always, and tried tu stop ui) cry in' by pruyin' " - now oiu were you tiieu, unugei r " Not quite fifteen, ma'am." " Were yon uut glad when you auw America, my lumr chilil ? ' ' tudnde nnd indade I was, for I'd been sick all the way, aud when the vessel came up the river to I lum-.Uh.lu. I men with n.v. Hul when the vessel anchor ed, aud the people cmne from shore, and 1 heerd (hem a greetiu' oue another, my heart fell like u gn at lump ul lead, for I'd uuUaly in thia wild, new country to greet me. Then I cried ncniu, but it wa with the hearl-acho. 1 Bat there all alone, when one of Ihe wit-men, who hail been very kind to me ou Ihe pas-e, .came up tu me. and brought wilh her n man, who, she said, used tn know my mother when she was a slip ul a fill in Coleraine, nnd if 1 would po homu wdh lum. bu would lrv tn liod me a ulnre. I bundled up my -'..ii,.. u,i..',-i, irr milv few nieces, and went wilh him. This was on Saturday mgm hko, .uisa ciimi.aim on Monday ihey look me to a place. " Was it a nice place, Bridget t " " Yes, ma'am ; but 'twas a plain, hard-working f"- when I'd my si uses I prayed God would just keep me alive to see my mother. He heard mv iimyer. she continued, crossing herself devoutly, "and before mo ther came 1 was well aam, though my heart was lull t sorrow lor ciiie. When I sent for mother, 1 lold her not to come till fall, fori Ihoiight by lhat time I'd lay by a trnio of money io i.-iko a room iu runaueipuia anu ouy some iriiiture. All summer j worked hard, ami Mrs. tun, the good soup give me as much money in the IhI) as if LiBie had tH-en workiu loo. one know d what 1 wnni d with it, and she give me some old chairs, and a bed. too, I was sorry to leave her, for her ami her husband w-as kind to ui alwavs ; but I know'd mother would feel lonely like in town without me. So I packed up II my ihiugs, and came iu Mr. Hill s market-wagou to town. Father Shano had writ to me lhat the vessel was expected iu a week or so aud 1 came to town just in time to n ut a nice room fir mother. I'd enough of money to piy a nioiiih's rint ahead, and to buy some Wood- 1 iH-ii i oollgm B carpet auu m nice ueir.ieiiu, and a table, and a good, warm stove oh, yes, and a ruth toned form, or solv, us ihe people call it here, that ked like the one wo hail at home in Coleraine. Gracey give me a little trifle, which was a grate dale for her, see in' it had been summer-time, and hc had to have a new bonnet, hem' in town. The night belore mother came, Grncev ran round irom her place to see mother h room, and how proud fell, as we aloud in the middle of it, and looked around at all the things we fell so mh. Now. ii we only Had a uurcau, said uratoy, io put under that little glnaa of mine.' unuev nlwava h id nncr nonona man me. i niver thought a bit of a bureau, for 1 know'd rnothe had a chii winch would hold .liidn a cloitiea anil hei all Ihev lu'd, poor thing". Father Nhnuecniue (ose me Hint night, too, mid biougiit a big, black, Wot Lrniss to Iuhiu over the mantelpiece, ami it string ol linn-m - j "rr.' j yen- little tut, poor bisie wnuiH come io my muid. and I'd think ol how mcrrv she'd been if she d been I iv in : ami urnle ti ara would roll down in spite ol me. Father Sh uie spoke veiy pretty about her, ami made mo leel belter, slid alter lie aud uracey went away .ntdown by the stove, aud l be re 1 tnl all nikht, foi did n'l want to rumple the bed I 'd made up for mother, for tho rheels looked so white and smooth. The next wliernooii tho vessel laiuo up ihe river. but H w.is ten o clm k at night belore mother got oft Their 1 liwd on the wharf, tnlkiu' lo her, tuai was on the nuld vessel, all the evenin . When she hi st site me, she cried, " ' Ih h. ami it's my Bridget, God blesx her1' " She w a so glad, she'd hnve tumbled uei1oi but lor one of lli sailors who caught her. We both cried and laughed, and some laughed at Uf ; bill the good sailor who had cnught ahold of her when she won la in . told Her locpeerup, mat sue d aeu be ou snore wilh her Bridget. He helped her down the Bide ol the vcel. aud when she huugi d me nnd we both cried. saw him wipe his eyes. Ho shook hands with us Uith, t hi I asked where we lived, mid said he'd come In are us. " But. och, did n't mother store when she aee'd her nice room. Then she thi ow'd her upnu over her head und cried like nimby. Jinny had glow d so tail 1 did n't know her. I was glial she was (all, for I'd hated to see her. for fear she M make ine crv about Elsie, beiu little like her; but she wu near n lull asliincey, ami right preiiy. " Mother exKUnm d all the room, and hi seed me, and hueged ine, and then, w hen Ginei y came, she lonk- d verv proud for Grtieev w.tssolioe lookin'. Grncev Btaid all iiiejit, and wo made Jinny and In-r a bed on the Hour with the cushion of the firat, for mother snid she'd aleep wilh her Bridget. We talked nearly all niidit, nnd we all cried about Elsie, and I told 'em u great many pretty stories about her. " ' Yes, mother,' said Gracey, ' Elsie, the dnrliu, we alwava a blesmii' to PridiM, but I wa a trouble.' " 1' made her hush, and tnld bee she wasn't a had ih she oretemled to I.e. noil then alter n bit we nil Went tn sleep. But after I 'd I U a-h epw hile I wakened and there win innthor Innin' uver me crym' and kiaaiu mot 1 didn't ope mv eves, but laid ao still i for oh. Miss Eniin. it was so nice tn lme my own inoiuer nu aide me, nnd llieii I wasnl'iaid I whs dndtiiu'." Well, Bridget,' 1 said, a the gu l wiped her eyes how did you suppml your Utile In y T "erv liv. mu ii ii. sue re ue nu unn en re of ourselves. Mrs. Mill cattle ul iilul aked JlliiiV lo go and live Willi her. I lum I got a nice place at poor Mrs Keuyon's iimiliei . Vm kunwrt Mis. h v..i in Kim, i was sue n imi i' i Indeed I did know her. for Mary Kemoii had been one nf mv dearest friends, ami only a few shnrt month before Ihe grave had closed over her the be iuttlul and the good. "Well," continued Bridget, "altera bit I got mother two nice H rat-floor rontus, at the comer ul the street where she lived ; and in Uie Iron! one she opened a tnioceiit Bridget's lift.. Her lover th. n.f Lind. hearted sailor who had been so intereated in tliera when widow Korevan lauded He came to see them L ,i had promised, and thouph Bridget and the wid-w thought that Gracey' pretty aula and bright eyea orougnt inm so olten uo' evrnin's," ihey soon found out 17". ? g011 Bri"' I'e was after. i fi ! e enr "ow Soue ,"";0 we wr ingaged," aaidllndget "and nearly that since I have seen or heerd tell of him," and she sighed heavily. " Where did he go to, Bridget ? " " Why, ma'am, lie worn in a states government vessel Ut ihe lugees, and be said ho d write to me ; but I ve niver had a line from him since ho sailed. He writ a letter to me at Norfolk town just before he went oil, and told me lolove him true 'til became buck, then wo d bo man mid wife. Mothar Jong since wanted me to take another hen inr .i.n i'.n ...;,. ni.i and bein' plain like, nobody will have mo, then 1 '11 be n old maid Hint nobody liks or cares for; but I'd sooner bo nn old maid than break my vow to Patrick; and even Father Shane hns scolded mother and Gracey about it, for they both taze me and he sez I'm right." " How do yuu mean break your vuw, Bridget 1 " " Whv vim ma Mi, P....... l,..i. Dni.iK l -...) r 1 old Ireland so much that we rigilurly ingaged ourselves, like the people used to in the old country." now was umt, my child 1 "Patrick takes Prayer-honk the night before he Went away, mid stood in tint middle nf moilmr'a innm and swore on it by the holy cross, that he niver would marry any woman but me, Bridget Keruvan; och, but his oath was so solemn und beautiful, it made me tremble all over. Then he puts ihe Prayer-book in mv lap, nnd we took bold of each other's hands over it, and I iimoe uio same vow, and then we both kissed the book. Mother and Gracey were by nnd heerd it all. How can I, then, Miss Enna, even if I wanted to, take ano ther bean 7 And I 'm sure if niiv thine happens In him shall niver waul another beau, for he was mv tirar renl one, and he seemed lo come right in Elsie's place like uiy nenri. As she si tiled henvilv F rom furled hr l,v 11 1 in v her Bhe was perfectly right in keeping good faith to the absent Patrick; that she need not mind if they did trouble her.it was better to suffer annoyances than give io un wrong. 'T' -lli-'ht she Cold in lltd. " thev lazed mnan Urkarm I would n't hnve any thing tn say to one of the neighbor's boys from Coleraine, who know'd us when we wore childer; and mother said it was her belafe that Patrick was safe and happy somewhere else, married some niner woman. I hia made me very mad, and started up ami went out of the house without suyin' Wold J but mother rntl alter me down the street, nnd made me kiss her good-night, and we made up and parted friends," " That wiib rmht. Bridget, for she is vour mnlhr. nnd though mistukon, she meant it for the best." " I know that, Miss Enna, but they trouble me so milch, I sometimes hate to go home." Then ahe went softly up into her bed-room and brought down a poor, worn-looking letter, and a dilapidated book, wilh nun cover off, and the leaves part gone. IhiN is his letter from Norfolk town, Mist Enna; rend it, ploe, aloud, for I nivor lire heuriu' it." read it, and found it to be a manly, affectionate, over-like letter. Hetouchun v reminded har nf her vow, iu homely, plain language, it is true, but real ian words wein they, that brought tears to my eyos. " iihi is inm hook, Dridgei f " Oh, Mia Eniin." replied the cirl. look tin? down. und her round face grew crimson, " it ' a book of his'n. Hu used tube always readin' iu it ; nnd one day he throw'd it into my lap, and suid, when 1 could read it tie a give me a silk gownd ht tor a quane to wear. I laughed nud thought noihiu at all about tt until after he'd been gone above a year, when 1 loiind it down at mother's one night in my old chist, which mother had given me when I 'd bought her the bureau pour Gracey wanted to had. I ve kept the book iver since ; aud I ke it out ul my drawer at niuhts, nnd sit down and ry lo see sninelhin' in it. but even if I could rade. which 1 can't, I could u't see iiothin' iu it, for it always innkes ine cry," 1 took the book Irom her with great curiosity t I was anxious to seo what was the nature uf it, for I h 'ped to judge by it of the character of this Sailor-lover. It was Falconer's Shipwreck. I was salified, and was a tinner friend than before in Patrick. A few weeks afterward, one night Bridget came home with a face perfectly rudiaul, ur "Ajmia," as she would nave said. 1 was reading in my bed-room all done. She came in, closed Aunt Mary's door, and giving me a letter, said. " Rade it, dear Mis Enna, rade it ; he's alive, and ia comin' home ; " and she sal down on the rug beside me, and laughed and cried at once aa I read the letter aloud to her. tinre enonth, the lover was safe and true. He bad written Ut her often, but the letters had been lost, he ' supposed, ns he had uoer heard from ber; but he felt sure, he said, that she was still his Bridget, even if be nu iiih near irom ner. " There, you nee. Miss Enna. how bad I 'd benn if I 'd done as they wanted me tu," sho exclaimed ; " and n Father Shane said to mother to-night, when he read the beautiful letter for he brought it tu me. Patrick writ to nun, and suit him this fetter tn me inside ot his'n, bekuse he said he'd writ so often lo me, and sure a letter would rach mo through Father Shane." " I'utieut Reader, Him is a true story ; hut 1 am the nly ono to be svmpnihued with in it, for I lost my jewel of a chambermaid. A few months afterward Patrick came home and claimed his faithful Bridget. We had a busy time when she was married for the whole family took an interest in good Bridget's fortune. Patrick was a nice, healthy, bright-looking Irishman; itid when on the Sunday alter he arrived he came to take her to mass, I nw him as they walked down the street togethor, look at her sturdy little figure with as much admiration as it it had possessed the nue proportions nf a Venus. Love is such a beau ti tier. Father Shane married them, and Patrick rented a nice little bouse in the suburbs of our town, aud took Widow Kerevmi home to live wilh ihem. Bridget it happy wife ; but she haa one trouble, and th;it ia, her huahaud'a calling takes him away from her, aud places him in danger; but when he return a from long voye gra Bhe ia aa bri-ht anil merry asa Inrk. I fie oilier flay I went to see her, and as her tittle girl Elsio came nestling close to me, Bridget said. " bver since lhat child was bum, Miss cans, I leel that my blessed dnrlint has come back to me. Och. but He ' been kind to me," she said, crossing herself with devotion, " Inr he give me back both Patrick and Elsie." Good girl ! Gnd had indeed been kind to her, for he had bestowed upon her those priceless git Is of the spirit Faith and Truth. In a Hurry. Pnilie, Clerk of the Common Pleas, has been sick, con fined to his bed for a few days. No interest particularly au tie red, uidesa it were the matrimonial, as none could be married without license, and none could give that same but the Clerk, harly Sunday moron g there was a thundering at rniiie s bed room door, wmm being opened, in stalked hair young Irishmen, good looking and well dressed. Says the forward one. Is your name l ame T Yes," said Mr. P. Clark of the CoorlV sava Pal. That same," Bay Paine. Thou 1 wants a license to he married, " said the ngiiab'd individual, " ami I wauls ye to be in a hurry about it, on acctmut of the child." (,' ) 'ante fainted. rutin Dealer. " lies, ma am ; out iwas a piam, iimu-w omnia -1 - . - - . ;.i ily t they kept tnly m; and they had a lot of childer "ich kept her nicely. Those who heard Gov. Johnston at Jefferson, and who now read our report of lhat speech, will be at once conscious of the short-enmings of our attempt In give it m print as a on re skeleton ot his masterly address. Nine columns nf small type would be required I'm a report in full. The best pnanihle transcript would not do him justice. When the banished Athenian orator, Echuies, n cited in the laud of his banishment the s)oech of Demosthenes, w Inch hail wrought hia defeat and exdr at iiuie-amid the plaudits nf his excited hearers he exclaimed, " how much more enthusiastic would he your admiration, did you hear Demosthenes himself1" The report nf Gov. Johnston's speech comes in it Hoe force only from hi own lips. Ahtm-bvfa Telegraph. How happens it lhal Judge Spalding and Senator Swill weir uot among the delegates at the Cleveland tree Soil Convention r Are ihry at length tatished that It is a Kouiewhat hsxardous business to attempt to lead two distinct pirttes, of opposite political creeds f or are (hey becoming rnnviucid that they can beet atconiphsli their ends by standing behind the curtain just now, and auming a virtue they hate not. Hav. iug reminded o go it strong lor noon, in onier io reinstate themselves as (he lenders of ihe Locofoco party Summit, i would haidly do to go og truly and tnke a sent in a Coim ..tion called to notuiusie au opposing ail.hdiile for (io, r : rveu It they de-irrd In see. Snrh a nomination Heeled Such n Imsinesa they could eiitiul to the hand ul our trieuds Spelman, Dewey, and Edgerioti ; who, uotbiiig loth, seem to have gone into the work wilh alacrity. Well, well t men will illiileitttaiid lliesti lliiitH some nf these days, ll At the Judge covets his truck with proloundost miming. Nine mi Beacon. Peirr McUnrlv was arreate.1 ai S.mduaky City ou Monday Inst for passing iilerteit money ones al tered to fives, Ohio banks. The R .ill oad Irom Coviiuttou, opposite Cincinnati. Ut Lexington, is commenced, '.Nl mile being under cun-iract. it The census Inker mention as curious fuel lhat they do find n single negro over ion vrura nf agr, who was notwell acquainted wilh Geu. Wahii.gtnu. The rnivt isitv of Mn log in ib now In full operation All tuition is perfr.ilv free. One sfH tion of hind in every township in the State is set npati for Us endow, inept. It is located at Ann Arbor, ami the buildings err unsurpassed for neatness and accomodations. John Van Buren has been rlioen a delegate to the New nrk Deinnermie Convention at Syracuse, uot withstanding the efforts node tn defeat bun. J

1 VOLUME XLI. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1850. NUMBER 2. , PUBMHHKI) EVERY T U K ri l A Y MOWNINH BV MCOTT & IUH, OH. 1 1 K I' f 1 ' K nnUTU-KAST chunks of man bt. and scuas aii.v. THESIS lnvnrhibly In advance. Week y per annum In Culurnhus out ol the city; Ity iiihII, hi 11 file Tif libs of tuiir will upwards Tim nbs of ten ami upwards, to one address Daily, usion Tri-Weekly, do - Weekly do., i inula vj; To club of live tuid upwardi 4U The Journal In also published Dally and Tri-Weekly during the year ; Daily per annum, by mail, T ; Tri-Weekly, :. lit oo . 1 50 , 1 00 ,.. 1 W Kates of Adverilahia; Weekly Paper t Uneiquare, 10 line or lew, one insertion " " earli H'lditiuual " " ' " 1 month S " " :i " fl " " " 15 " " " uliangPBhle monthly, par annum i " weekly " " Standing card, on iqnaro or less, " oohiinn,cliai)Keallofuartrly," " W mm lot) IK) Othercaiei not provided for, charitable, in conformity with the ihnTB rates. , ... All leaded advertlieinniiU tobcchnrge.il not leaetliarj d.oublfltho above ratoi, and measured a if solid. Advertisement on the Inside exclusively, to be charaiid at the rate of 50 per cent. In advance on the above ratei. TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER :l, lfi.r0. KriHii tlm Cincinnati Daily Commercial. The Curtlnif(e Convention. Inharmonious Organization' Contentious Spirits Speak-trt Choked Down Deluire Factious Outriders Ad journment to tne Cuyttmt Buttle and liloodsiea. At an early hour nu Saturday morning one of our e putters waa on the ground at Carthaue. prepared, like tho "chiol," to "tike notes "and " print 'cm" The a - mm ii bin git waa the largest he ever remembers to have wiiiicsBid on a iimilnr occasion. A constant stream ol vehicles, loaded with " submissive," " factious,' und all "thr kinil of spirits, poured in from every direction, ami continued I'm in early dawn until the limit of noon l no two public houses rivals, by the wav. an to par ty )ti( rencuH did not begin to In ninth idirlicr l'ur lialf tho ussem bin go, ami thu sheds uiui stables of the vicin ity were crowded during thi) ruin, while hundreds look refuge in their horseless vehicles, and enioyed ihem- , 5 on solves as be! they could, matiy at wild vehicles having 8 oo M)Mn provided with a" slight amile " of delicate stores Ho ' ,,rf-"',ll,,d hy a wiie eyo to contingencies. . I he pru-"h oo 1 dent ii "til never goes far from home without hi oin- nf on oreiin, and another sort ol men would rather stay at ..D.p)0 .. o as The Grand How of Hie Hamilton jLo-cos "NeniUor' Jolinson ooiiteslinH Uin sent iifiuin lliinnony t Tlio Commercial of yi slerday cuitainod the fullest m couut wo h ive ri-i'.i-iVL-d of the doing ol the hiirmo-ninua democracy of Hamilton county at Carthago, where they attempted to mnke their comity nomination.. Wo traiu fer the di;cripiioii of the dny'i work to our column! Jor tlio beiietit of our readers. It ia worth rcadinji- Theae Homilton Loroforoahear olout the same rolativo poaition to the democracy of Ohio, that i he Ohio democracy does to thai parly in the Uti. ion. Gen, Call's organ at Detroit said, a few dayao, that the Ohio Locolocot had a wny of running the currency qiieation, &c into the ground, a little ahead of any other Btato. So thu Hamilton Locofocna, in ail the rdementa of diaordorly radiculam, keep a respectful distance ahead of the real of the State. But read the proceeding and judjje for youratdvea. More Hurinouy iiieiil prosei for the Democracy Groinis of the bitter ciidcro The uiiuouucoimmt of un iutoiitiou tu establish an-otficr Deuiocmtic paper at WawhitiKton City, and of diacarditig the servicea of Father Hie hie and his orpin ha thrown that venerable Galphin into a nervous atate. lie can see dothiug but diacord of tin: Democracy and .diM)lutiuti of the Union, by uch u atop. W hether j the old gentleman meaim the " Union," iiewsaper or the union of these Htntea, we are not advined. We with tho attention of our renders to the following lament which appeared in the Union of August i7. It don't hok much like that harmony and brotherly good will of which that party, in day pnat, wt-re won' to honst : A Nkw Tokch or Discord. After our jmhlio cuuu-cilt have been dial me ted for nearly nine mouths by that emharraaaiui! topic which has ao long agitated the public mind ; whiUt the series of live bills before Congress has j 1 1 h t pusa'-d the S.-iinte, and it is hoped will puss tlm Houho of Representative ; whilst we . seemed lo be catehhig a vtw of land, and truted to reach i he port in safety ; and whilst every man who sighs for peaee is hoping to obtain it, uiiew element of discord is to lie thrown into the bosom ot the community t It is impossible to mistake the object, the agents, uud the means which are involved. It has long been suspected that Col. tieuton would be brought oui aa a candidate for the no't preaidency, and liint have been g veil out of the i:fltablitlimeiit of a journal which ia intended to promote his aapii atioim. Defeated aa hia friends hive recently been in the election of Missouri, and cut otf ns he ia from the prospect of a re-elect imi lo the Semite of the United Stale a suggestion haa escaped from his friend lhal he would he a candidate lor the congressional district of St. Loni in IS.Vj, and that when a member of the House he would become a candidate for the chair. It hn even been prooa' l, with very little iiwwb uty, indeed, on the part of the projector, thiil hi elevnlion to the chair of iho Hnuae rtho'uld become the teat in the eleeiiun of members of Congress throughout the Union. Now, the scheme of rimuinK him for ihe preaidencv doe not ititerlere with the other design; for in case no should not he elected President, he may alill aspire to ihe honor of the chair. We observe n letter nddrearnl by a correspondent in this city to tlie New York Evening Post on the litli inat., which point ditecily nt lies object. Tho following extract will develop Hume of the tneiiim and cliques upon which the new upinmt i to depend lor sticcea. Alter giving a very ili-nifi-'imoiis atateineiit of the manlier in which Mr," Van Huren was siiieieded in the in. ruination o the Itultilliore ('ouveniion of 1H I4, and alter referring to tho election of Mr. I'olk, mid ulier groaaly iniHrepresi-uting tlie changes which it produced in the democratic party, this puniHiu uml pedantic author ppK-eeds o open the schcuiu whii h th- se diacoii-tented Van Buren and Benton men have now in view, The git of the whole matter ia contained in the following piinigiaph from tho Washington letter : "The aoiiiheru wine of the areat and lriumphnui na tional democratic party ha degenerated into a mere appeiidnL'dol a iluve oliircliy, wliieli tlirenieu uti stability of tho Union, while the northern portion m apht iiMh several tm tioiia, each clnimin' tne Hpoaunic aiicccasioti.' and all ol llimn, like ihe iiutxriniiaio artist who wrote ' a home' -over hi picture of tint animal. relviue lor succeaa on the ilmtiuctness with wiin li Un term democntt ia embla.oiied mi their buniiers, and the national govern! it, with ila vat array of pme and inlluence, hi pa-seil mtu Hie Initios ol tun open and conaitleul eiieiiiiea nf iHiimhir richi. In view of this slite of thiiu'a, it is proposed to ctuhh-li, at the scat of the national government. democratic paper thai will extiresa the wishes and will of the d mocnit ic musses, and vindicate the simple and sublime crcd ot democraey. It will present the name of the great senator ot Minim ns itM-nuiiiilaie lor llic presnieney, not merely thai ho atone, ol all other men now hvinir, deserves lhat exalted honor, hul that his political ante. rodent mil nn-sent position will serve a n centre und rallying point for the organization of the deim cintic aenliineiit of the inetimi, mid best secure nhk the detection mid iMiiotnro ftf tlie ' blind ifiiih s uinl hvpoctites,1 end the retor;ilioii ol the nati"iial government to the .leth rsonimi (Hilii'y. 'I lie ptopnety nay the neeessity of aiich a nimenii nl is apparent to eve ry tedecliiu deinmTnt. While the Vlave interest is represented here by the Southern Press, the tniilV ami money interest hv the Ititclligetir.-r, nnd the trading and compnuiiKtiiiii politieiinin by thai poliin ul tnoti slrosltv, the UasluiiL'tnu I mou, the oice ol the masM- the people, who make mid ur.tu'iko P res id tits, is un heard and imfelt in the imtion d counsels, nnd their go vernment threatened with oertbrow, or to lie surren dered up. the victim ami spoil of contending 1 ml cr ests.' " The ninnstrosity " of thi project require but very few words to expose it. Here we mive a acheine which, under the pretence of rallying the deiuiMTntii nmsars on the prent di-mocratic principles, is intended to combine all the element of discord free-anilism, Van Uui-miism. Beutoiiisiu, and Sewaidtin, into one monstrous mats tu gialily ihe iiinbitioii of a disnlb'ct etl and aspiring iiidividnul. Mils cnahinmc iiinot press his pretuisions without rt-viing the contest which ha so long affitntrd the country. They could not elect him on the principle ot Iree-soilum without i'lontni; the whole South, and sneriricins the Uni m is' If. Yet is this moiiBiroiis pint now to be hatched, at a moment when there were sanguine hopes of passion the bills before the house, uml givnm peace in ihe Union. U ia to be sent forth niialu lo agilelo Iho country It run-not succeed without dividing the democratic party, (a that party is also divided only to he deieatcil tn Missouri,) and i ividiug the Union itself. ICullier I'erttonnl. The huimoiiiou Democracy of Hamilloiu ouul) ulee in one thing in branding their party ns knave and look They mukeoiit ihe case clearly. Head this: The Dispatch uv we makenn ass of mi rue If. Well, the editor of that jmpei has no trouble tu thai way, nature duUhat job lor him. injuim We would call attention to the advertisement in an other column of the f emale Medical College Bt Fhili-delphiii. Theae MedicolColleye for females are a new thing under the Ann-Wean sun, but tho idea isanoicot- leut one. We know of no reason why females cannot become good physicians, ami we can see many gondrea- j tons why ihe re should he femule physician foi female patients. And even for males, suffering with some diseases heart affections for itHlaucu, they would he first rate. We trust the plnn will succeed. A mun mimed McCullum, a resident of Covington, Ky, was brutally murdered iu that city, on SaMrday night lit, by a party of three jm rsotis who ft 11 upon him, and beat him with clubs mid -ttom-a, u lhal he died iu a few hours. (T7"Th) New Yorkers are making great an .ingemcni lor amusements the coming fall and winter Iu iwehe tho at res and opern hnisos, thirty twotliouauiid and hmr hundred people aie furnished with fun, at lU rule of ai least flOU.imO peruight. The Indianapolis Slate Journal states Ihe number of burials in that city the last teu days of August to be 55, one-half of whom were from the country, and one-fourth vera reported to be of cholera. home than risk the chances of a " sntritual comforter abroad. The world's wisdom seems to grow at ihe corn crop increases, eVoii a a preserved taupom attain to double its size iu a iur of alcohol. The crowd was a motley one, presenting all aorta of menial anu physical diversities, all degrees ot iRleni, from idiocy up to minds ol the most commanding powers, and ill I shades and phases of temperament, from meek humiliation and submissive antialaction under any circuniBtniireB, to revolting hostility under all circumstances. WhigH, Deinucniu, Bolters, Free Hollers, Nothingarians. Dou't-eare-a-ilainus, and, hi short, every ocl, segment, and division of main parties and deiaehnienlB of parties, were repj.'a.-nted in that motley uiuas. Little knots tied themselves up in little corners to discuss confused matters, and retired with the satisfaction of having made 11 confusion wnme confounded." Candidates were dodging here and there during tho recesses, plotting, tricking, wisely winking, baiting traps and (riggers; and seemed to sutler and to sorrow iu their ardor, that nature had not conferred upon them the powers of ubiquity, especially for that (to them) most interesting occasion. It would have en a course ol study, iroin A 1 C to the graduating ploma, for one who desired lo make n mnster of him- elf in Ihe mysteries of political manceiivreing aud parly trickery, the only stumbling block in the whole routine of study (aud that n small atVair iu the premi es), nemg the obscurity nt that Lihulous thing called political honesty. to close this prelude, there was no lack of honest intent on the part of many compos nip mat unnveution harmony, and concession tu obtain hurtnony. beiuifthe aim of manv, especially amons ihe hoary old battlers of tho rural regions. 1 he Convention was called to order at ten oV hick. A. M-, by appointing Dr. Geo. W. Fries as President, md Messrs. Wilson nnd Shroyor a Secretaries. Un motion, tho Secretaries ca led the names of the lelegutes, commcticinB at the First Ward of thecitv. who came forward and took their Beats iu the order of the mil. Tne names wore called from the publiBhed list iu the Eurpiirer of Saturday. When the names of ihe delegates of tho Seventh Ward were called, as given in said paper, each man answered and took hi sent, when Mr. Johnson f fam- oiib in the contested Senatorial case of Broadwell and iluiBoii) rose and asked why his name had not been alh d, aud others rose and demanded the same of the President. The President stated that the names hud been called by the Secretary h they had been otficinlly furnished to the Convention. Mr. Johnson mounted the stand unon which the Pre sident, Secretaries and reporter stood, and iu a loud voice proceeded to assert the claim of himself and col ognes to a seat in that Convention. I Shouts of " move him !"" turn him out " knock him down '" " go it, Johnson j we'll stand by you!" hisses, hoots, huwis, neerB, and all manner ol noises Irom nil sides oulatde aii-1 inside. In the midst of this confusion, Mr. Jnhn son gave his voice its fullest pitch, like Byron' trum peter, to urown one noise with a iiote still greater, aud snid he was bound to be heard. He was a man that would not submit tu have his rights trampled on with mpuniiy, ana as he claimed a n- ht to a Heat in that Convention, he was determined lo be heard. Ho had Ins ceriihrate of election as a delegate, and that was bound in be respected considered at least and not kicked out. He had been chosen a delegate hv a meet- ug nt the lime and place set forth hv the Executive ommtitee, and he and his colleagues had the nuly ght to represent the Seventh Ward iu the Convention, le saw the inotjw of the movement; it was apparent to all. The frwf delegate did not suit a certain faction, and hence that faction, having the numerical strength, would kick them out. He was not to be put down by ivado, or bullied by out of his seat without a hear ing, and he demanded lhat the tinmen of himself and olleogueB be called. Here a trnmendous uproar was ruined on all sides. iu the midst of which numbers of scuts broke down, which added to I ho confusion, and " outsiders " milled iu from all ipiarters, yelling like aboriginals on a high pree.j Mr. Johusoii strove to continue, although nearly over whelmed by the hurrah, aud ihe President screamed for order, and Mr. Johnson screamed to be heard, and amidst a hurricane nf hoots and hisses, mainly directed at Mr. Johnson, with a sprinkle at tho President, the latter commanded Air. J- to take his seat, and Mr. J. refused. Mr. Johnson contended that he hud a right to speak. That the body before him was not a Convention, hut a mil's of men in a state of organization, nnd lhat ihe ob ject ol calling' the names ol delegates was in ascertain ho were entitled In seals, and he and his colleagues had a rihttolhe place In which they had been elected, and to assert their claims thereto. This was not the fust time he hail ton lit fur a seat, (alluding to (he rase in the Senate;) he hud stood up iu the tire before, ami mid not surrender at dia'-retiou nuw. (ured up roar ) President Take your seat, sir. Mr. Johnson I will be heard, sir. aud will Bland up to uiv rigliis in spite of nil bravado. President -ton shall ail down, sir. I ami placed ro to preside, (aildresaiue the delegates.) and I Will uminUiii the dignity and authority of my position at ery iiauni. Mr, Johnson endeavored to continue, and the Con ni ion seemed upon tho verge of an insurrectionary iiitbieak, when the President wired Mr. J. by the col lar and endeavored Iu force him from the stand. TIih movement had ao etl" -el fur a moment thai threat ened a breakine up of the Convention, nnd, probably, sin h would have been (ho result, hut for ihe coolness it some prudent men. In ihi demonstration canea wen; r.'iiM'd, "hi'lit: ' was rrpd hv the " outsiders, and Mr. Win. Hunter, one of the patriarchs ot the par ty, rus heit torwan to all Ike ftir. .loimsim with us cane. ha vint' it raised, iu the air with thai hostile intent, his L'luwin tu red wrath aud his eves Hashing destruc tion lo "contentious apiritB." Several persons rufhru iu and prevented the " mow, Cries uf " move him," mug on every side, and Mr. Philip Weaver, oilO o( the disputed delegates, cnllie fivr- waid and loudlv accused Mr. Hunter with having de serted (ieii. Cass two yenmiKO because the Democrats repined to elect him Auditor, aud denounced him as Whig who had no rihitobeiu that Convention! Thus mailers went on for about littecii minutes, when it was jected members were elected, woaheld before the time, and wun composed of but a dozen or so, who had hurried up to get the whip hand of the people. . Alfuiri at this ooiut threatened Muolher outbreak, wiieu Mr. Frois, the President, suggested that the difficulty with the Seventh Ward be Daaaed over for the pres entthat Iwth delegations take their aeatt, and that wo-ir ngui to tne same be a matter or luture action. This was acceded to, aud the Clerk proceeded with the call. When the names of the Ninth Ward members were called, a Hibemiau outside of the rope jumped up and aid, " Mr, President, I resaved two hundred votes in the bloody Ninth, und 1 claim a sate, too." Laughter, but no olhcial action or reference.! After the roll had been fully called, tho vacancies iu mo ueieoanon tilled, and all tho members had taken their seats, Mr. Noble, from the Sixth Ward, moved lhat a Com mittee of one from each Ward and Township be ap- pomieu to uralt rules lor the (iovernmeut ot the uon veiimui. Carried. Mr. Black, of Columbia, moved that a Committee of one Irom each Ward and Township be also appointed, tn settle the difficulty of the disputed seals in the Seventh Ward. A member objected to the iitiiiitiiitment of another uimutee mr trie purpose, rle moved that tne committee on Rules Im einonWHreil tn anltle the ueildillU difficulty, Mr. Black snid that if this malter was referred to the Committee on Kuloa, the business could not soon be done, lor Unit w hich they had already iu their bunds, was sufficient to occupy more than all the time-which the Convention had to sprire. The day is now more than half gone, and things promise anything but a rapid progress of business, and as this matter is a delicate one, it will reipiire delicate and careful investigation, und persons and papers will have to be sent for. I am one nt that Committee, and I am not willing to lake this matter upon my hands, in connection with Ihe other business before us. Sir, appoint a special Committee, for I assure you lhat I for one will sit it out until January next, before I will consent to report against any of the patties, without the fullest investigation. Both tho delega'ioua came here certified to, ami I will never consent to anv uf them hcinir hooted nut like dogs, or summarily disposed of without a fair trial and a full investigation as to their right to act as delegates, and such investigation cannot be had iu ihe Committee on Rules a committee appointed for a special pur- After some sharo shootinir from meinhnrann nil aidna. the motion to refer tho subject to the Committee on Rules prevailed. Our Reporter understood that Mr. Black withdrew irom the committee. Mr. Israel Brown moved that llin emmnittee hnvo letivo io withdraw to prepare their report, which mo tion prevailed, wlun the Convention adjourned to meet at 1 o'clock F M. A few minutes after the adjournment the rain com menced coming down iu u manner that would have astonished the nut ives in ihe days of the A rk, and it continued until night. The water found its way through the roof of the Convention shed, and spoiled all the " documents," and completely deluged the dinner hv hlcB, which were placed under a long shed as antiquated as the town itself, the clap-boardB upon Ihe roof of which hod become so attenuated as lo pass for specimens of laths of early ages, the crevices between them being wider than the space which the occupied. One half the guests eat their dinners with umbrellas over their heads, while the other hull, in their unsheltered and hungered anxiety, drowned themselves nnd fiahed among thedislies for provender cost, fifty cents a head, water thrown in' At Bickhnm's, things were rather more comfortable. People there wot a good dinuer. without the extra ol a duck At two o'clock the Convention met at Bickham's, and the committee reported rules, and resolution against Ihe reception of (he " auclmmitioii" d,.Pi-nt nf the 7th Ward, all of which were adopted when, on nc- , uuiit mi iuw tiiuiiiiiit-u inclemency oi me weniner, tne Convention adjourned to meet iu Cnlleire Hull, iu this city to-day at 10 o'clock. Alter the adjournment, a hunt nccuued in the rnad between n number of (he "outsiders," aud it extended among the crowd until nearly a hundred persons were engaged iu it at ihe same time, with stones, cones, clubs, and oilier weapons. The coolness and determination of 'Squire Taylor, of the city, and of Sheriff Cooper, auu m.ea rarmeie, wuo plunged into the nudit id it, iiuasaiicd, to maintain the iwace, preveuted serious con sequences. A it was,severa! jwisonswereinjured, iu a young man named Moor, n member ot the Wes ru r ire Company, was shot throuith the lee. This Irnt BB had no party origin, or any connection with the affairs of the Convention. Another I WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 4. 1850 Our Board of Health. I As will be seen by this day's report, tho gentlemen composing tliti body reaigu their office, and retire from iheir arduous and weunsnme labors, there being, in (heir upiuiou, no farther neeessity for their services iti that capacity. While we congratulate our fvlluw-uiti zens un the restoration ofjjcalth egaiu to our city, we teel that we but express their united wice in tender ing to the Bourd of Health the sincere thanks of this community for the faithfulness and diligence they have manifested in the discbarge of the humane but onerous dutiea of their at at ion. We congratulate I hem, also, ou the termination of their nbors, and trust they will, in the duo appreciation of their services by their fi lhw-citiens, find that reward which pecuniary compensation cuuuot furnish. B V tHSA OUVAl,. A gluuce at the pum Gen. Ilamer. " Resolved, That we have seen with regret, lor tome time past, that there was a hard money fm iioii growing up in Ohio, who are opposed to all' banks of eircii-luiiou, and whose doctrines, if carried out, in the .present condition of the people, mult be rninoti- to the best interests of the community, especially to the whole debtor class, who will be orushed by a policy so .alal and deatruc ive. " Resolved, That it is high time for the people to lao their utliiirs into their own hands, and that so loii" Uf they entrust them to reckless dumagogues or to violent, ultra politicians of any par-y7Hil the industrious, busi ness classes ot the community must he thesunerers." The above are twoof several resolutions offered by the lute lamented Gen, Thus. L. Hamer, of Brown county, to a Democratic meeting at West Union, on tho 2oth of March, 18(2, and which were published in Ihe I had never seen a fairy her own self, but " Elsie the " I will i.-ll you, l have heard a ravo divine amy that Hod has two dwellings, one in heaven and the other iu a mesk uul thankful heart; which Almighty (Jod grant to nie ami to my honeat chohtr." Iiaak Walton. " How did you find them nil at home, Bridget f " "Hearty, ma'am, thank ye;" and the girl moved busily about (he room. She was my chambermaid and although she had only lived with me a short time, 1 felt very much attached to her, lor he whs so kind, industrious aud honest. Soon after she cume to us I was seized with a painful illness, and during it, she nursed me with the tenderness of a sister; often, when the spasms of ocuto pain would shake my feeble body, I hail seen large tears standing in her full, round eye. as she assisted me iu undrcasmtr. I observed that she was not in her usual spirits, and when she bunded me my dressing guwn, I saw thai herhandstrombled. But sue patiently went through every little duty, although I could well see that she wns suffering from some hidden trouble. When I sat down to my reading, she h fi .... ... p.iru mr me Bonn tea tor, dear reader, I tun a true obi maid, and love my cup of lea, as well as 1 love my existence ulmnsl. Presently she re-entered, and rolling a little teupoy beside my chair, she placed on it the waiter and, poured out my ,ea. Just then I heard ibn henw hronthinv ot my dear Aunt Mary, who was asleep iu the adjoining room. oiose the door ol Aunt Mary's room, my good Bridget," I said ; " and while ilrink n,v t,'H. Mini ant Ihii nice piere of limit you have Hindu ills, come and tell me anmetliilig altout Ireland." I knew tlii, woiild pli-aiu, Iter, fnrofton liad ihe talked bi tne at night, when I would be uudn iiiitig, abnitt the EtleiiH and vali nf lieitntifnl.iiniis.hii,,,..! nnlrnt,,a and the lalrn-i, with thwrrouud rili((. in tin, gra. She -th.rw''i,1'"''."'1 "f !! "ilj . But cum, the ,., ,h Inventory nlgnod, mat WOh her ll.nni- tx-na U . tn iiih mid wnrkpd . lliiioeet.t HnA.,..t'. i.e.. '' . $ . ,' :gested, (mid agreed to,) that all the delegates agnin retire, and that another call ol the Ml he had To exphuu the matter which gave rise to (he above dilVi.-iilty, we copy the following parnproph from a mor ning ueiuocraiic paper t "Alter (his temporary organization wns had. a call of (he names of (he Delegates to the Convention trom Ihe various wards and townships was gone into, and proceeded harmoniously until (he call of the seventh ward w hen two separate sects nf Del gH tea elnimed to rei-rcseid dial ward. One party having met at the hour named lor Hie call ot the primary meeting ot the ward, proceeded to elect a delegation by acclamation, and adjourned. Another party at erward met at tlio same phit e, and selected their delegates The Clerk aaain proceeded to rail the roll, when A uicmh'T rose and said that he had observed that iieuilv all iho confusion, doubt leas intended lo mar ihe progress of (he Convention in iis business, wns ncca-uu!icdhv Whigs who were mingled in and around the bodv. He would therefore move that a acrficanl-at- arms be elected to exclude all who did not act with the party A person suggested tuai me mover ne mane sergeant iit-anus. La lighter, j A rope was suggested lo be stretched Irom tree to live nmund (he around occupied hv tho deleeales. aud some ructions members expressed iheir dialike to he- iug " roped in ; " but the rope was procured and put up, and the motion tn elect a serges nt-at-nrm declared oill ol oilier. The Secretary proceeded to calhhe roll, when a del-1 egatc sngtiesteti that th- county members take their seats on the left, and ihe city members on tho riitht. A member horn one of the townships objected, and comic illy suggested tht as the country hail always been ripht, and never had been divided into fnctiotu, it wa in respect entitled to the " right" in this case. Auoitu T inemner tnougm n uninir inai uie ciiv tiie. atinn should occupy the front Beat and (he delegates from die country thrown in the back ground. Theub-jeclion were finally settled lo mutual satisfaction, nnd the rail ol Ihe roll proceeded, Hie delegates InKiiitf their seats as the roll was called, and vacancies being filled as each ward auu mwusiup came in. When lh seventh ward came on iu its order, the old lid, as published in tho Enquirer was called, and (tin members took (lieir seals. Mr. P. Weaver.nl the rejected delegation, demanded that hi name should be called, as he hud been du ly elected. Hooting, hissing and uproar, generally. tie was hound to on neani to nave a cimuce mr ins .ftt but would never submit to being kicked mil of it, Mr. Wiley McLean said ho would he heard, and was not one of the kind lo be either howled or clinked down. He hud been apjHtiuied a delegate iu accor-dniiee with tlm order nf (he Executive Committer ; ihe meeting hud been held at the proper hour ; he had and his colleagues hud been elected at the proper time, and those w ho now were permitted to take their icnts, had been appointed at a subsequent meeting, contrary lo all rule, to gain a selfish end. A member stated that the meeting by which the re- Harmonious" Demonstra tion. There has been a very interesting war growing up between the hards and the softs in the Perry and Hocking Distrut. Mr. Cose, tho delegate to the cuu- atitiitiptml Convention, would not go the hard, and therefore the Somerset and Lancaster paper mounted him rough shod. The Hocking paper defended him. The affair waxed warm, und now there is a kind of iiiiciiou in callutj; each other such amiable uaiues as villains, scoundrels, forgers, &c. file toilo.ving from the Hocking Sentinel, the Loco pupor of that county, shows off the latest plan to gel up a little political capital. We should naturally think that Bonn-body had got their foot in it: L'npsnmllrleil Forgery The following appeared iu the Perry County Demo crat of August I, aud iu the Ohio Eagle f July 30. " HOUSE RAISING MEETING." At a raising on Ihe farm of Itichaid Green, about M miles from the town of Logan, on the 27 Ih day of July, IH.r0, a Inruu number of Democrats were present, and after the building was completed, they determined on having a meeting, and, on motion, Richaid Green wa ppoiutPil eliaiiiuaii, and ll-iber! Lnrreo Secretary. Uiimutiouol tt. Uurreu, 1,. f . Urakk addressed the meeting in a speech ot about one hour, and strenuous ly advocated the principles of democracy, showing lear auu coucliiBivelv that the Democrat werenghlou every subject they advocated. Alter the address wa oncliided. the following resolutions were passed- Ktsotvtd, 1 hut we approve the position taken by Mr, Drake on the 4tb day of July, in a speech made by him on lliut day. iu the town ol Logun, and believe the sumo meets the approbation of a huge majority of the democrats ol Hoi king. Hrtolprd, That the proceed iocs of this meetiiiR be published in the Hocking Sentinel, Perry Co. Demo crat, Ohio hagle, and Ohio Ktnteainaii. RICHARD GREEN, Fres't. Robert Chirsn. Y As aoon as we saw the above iu said paper we pro nounced ii a Forgery- We kuew (hat it was usual to pohliah Jtrtf iu (he paper in tho coiimy where meetlujja held. It was never presented Here, nnu why ' Ue- cause we should have detected ihe forger at once. Here is the I Preef of Forte ry. I certify that 1 was Secretary of a nicotine called al K. Green's, alter raising a toimcco house, on ihe 27th Inly that said meeting was designed as a jest (hat uboui Yi voters were present uo resolutions were ptia- I no authority to publish ever given 1 never saw any proceedings of said meeting in mamiscriptor print until I saw them in the Perry County Democrat ol Au gust 1st, which l never signed or nutlmmed to be sign ed as Secretary. liUHrin i UUnitriX Au iru M II. IH..I). Mr. Curren is a man uf high character for integrity and may be implicitly relied upon. vn will not attempt to guess wnu is tne auinor oi tne infamous forgery but iho public ought lo know the criminal, inr a man who would du so, would rob a hen roost, sheep fold, or meat house, and in ht-halt of our c iti ens, we demand ot the hditor nt ihe Kngle ami Democrat the uamu of the nifty individual. It is due to our jteople, and to the reader of said pners, lhat the public may know who is (ceding the columns at said papers, aud imposing on their readers such Roar-1 oaens. ne asa nam papers innucr io give me prom ui the fraud tu their readers. Let your readers know the facts, and let the public have the name of ihe wretch. Ohio Statesman on the 19th of April of (he same y They wereudopted by that meeting, as the deliberate convictions of the Democracy in thai part of Ohio at that time, and no doubt embodied the views and feelings of a large majority of that parly throughout the Stute. t A short timo after this, tho Locofoco party threw off tho thin disguise of " Bank Reform," and boldly plant ed themselves on the hard money idea. But utter defeat awaited them, and for some years thi issue has. been withheld. In the January Convention, 1850, the subject was again introduced, and resolutions of the mont decided character were adopted. At the July , Convention the question wns again rnised, and, though some few men tried to avert tho storm and prevent (ho ' adoption of these measures, yet the hards prevailed, ! and resolutions, which will be found at the bend of this paper, were carried. The Locofoco party in Ohio have planted themselves openly on this issue. The people of the State are called upon to sanction this doctrine at the polls. Judge Wood atuuds before the people, claim-ing their nffroges for Governor on this issue. Members of the two branches of the Legislature are tu be elected on this issue. Tho result of the electiun this fall, whatever may be set up, will declaimed, and with a show of justice, us a verdict of the people on this issue. Of course, in this trial, every freeman is a juror. He should know the whole case. He should understand the practical effects and bearings nf the incisure. To eunble those who do not agree with us upon moat questions tn form nn enlightened opinion, we have Introduced tho resolutions of Gen. Hamer. We know he had much inlluence over many members of the parly wilh which he acted. They have been in the habit of at least considering his opinions. Wc ask the people to do it now. If they had weiifht in 1842. thev have equal weight now. The facts stated and the positions assumed are of just ns rnucb importance to ihe great mass of the people now as then. Upon ihis question he waa clearly right. He saw, as every man of ordinary sagacity must see, that the adoption of the hard money rule would effectually and utterly ruin a large and meritorious class of community. The laboring clnises the men in all kinds of business who hapeu to be in debt, who are so unfortunate us not to be bom of rich parents and with gold spoons iu their mouths these classes must be crushed by the adoption of the ardiual principle of the Locofoco party in Ohio as pro mulgated in their articles of faith. People of Ohio farmers, mechanics, lalioring men of alt nlsMta pr,,f. ions in yu the appeal is now made, and the day of decision draws nifh. ive week from lo-ilay, you will be called upon lo decide this is sue ut the ballot-box. Be not deceived by false professions. Do not permit yourselves to he lulled asleep by (he ass urn nee that there is no disposition nu the part of these hard-money men to enforce theirdoctnne if they gel the power. That will be a poor ph a when the blow comes. If you dei t re ruin if you courl destnu lion if you an sick of your present prosperity, and wish to come down to the price of laborers in hard money countries (hen the mud is plain, the course is clear. Von have only to go to ihe polls, vote for Wood and for Locofoco legislators, and you have done your part to bring ii sIhiiii. Let Wood be elected Governor let a majority of Loco foe os lie returned to the Legislature, and what w ill be said und claimed by our opponents T Wilt they not, at once, proclaim that tie people of Ohio have pro nounced un an issue, fairly made, that they are op-toacd to any other currency than gold and silver; mid that henceforth there shall be no other allowed tu Ohio Will not the members of the constitutional Conven tion, when (hey come together in December, say lhat the people of Ohio hud ratified the report of Mr. Lar- will, und had decided lhat then should be a clause in the now constitution j'ortver pronibiting ull batiks in Ohio r Of course they will. We desire that the will nf the majority um prevail We ciui stand the haid moiioy reign if it must come, a well us the must o people. We only desire that there should be n fair expression of views. This can only be obtained by our citizens vpting upon this linn I money issue as they desire that issue to be decided. ask I hem to consider the views of Geu. llainer. We Hsk them to reflect uikiu tho kffkct which the preva lence of the hard money idea curried out, will have on the prosperity of the State generally, and upon that of the individuals lhatcomjKJse the Stale. The Home Department The Wheeling Times recommends Hon. Joseph K. Chandler, of Philadelphia, fur Secretary of the Interior. By the way, the Times says, (he dutissof this of fice are very complicated, aud under present arrange meiits, discharged wilh great difficulty. There is uo building adupted to its usea, where the machinery of the office can be well arranged. The Secretary is iu one huildiug, and hia heads uf bureaus scattered all over that city of maguificem distances, with uo power ot constant consultation, without great iiiiouveuieuco. Under these circumstance, such au office would be a living death, aud Mr. McKeunan, with hia constitution, could lint possibly perform the duties of his ollice Hamilton county will do her duty, of course. She has nothing to prevent a majority, for the vvh .le ticket, of leu thousand. Let her democracy imitate the hur inouy and euerirctio action exhibited hv (he democracy iu other tails of the State, and she will cume up to Unit ligiirn, So mote it bv'otntttman What aimut huinbnggery to talk in this way. Hamilton county give ten thousand ma,oril) for the hard money ticket The Statoaman knows better. It 1b wilfully and delibemiety attempting to deceive aud gull it followers. Iu the preseut distracted taie ol the Locofocos there, if they get aiy majority at nllp Correspondence of tfaa Jourual.) Locofoco Nomination Free Rollers Over hoard. Mkdika, August 11, I8,'0. Mh. Bascox. The " United Douiifcmcy " held their Convention, for uominetioii of county ticket, to-day, and by iray of private talk) a most beautiful time they had The Old Hunkers had every thing their own way, while their now allies (tho Simon Pure Free S oilers) looked on with pious resignation. All tho nomination were from the old line Locofocos, viz: For Representative Jamki C. John so;. ( member in 1848-9); For AudttorCki.fitt B. Piunths, (Locufoco ex- postmaster at Medina); For Sheriff Gkohok W. Jordan, (an unmitigated Lo cofoco) ; For C(iaiwnoai Joaihab SiNMoat,(same as last above.) All resolutions which did not square with regular Lecofocaism were laid on the table without ceremony us well aa all resolutions shewing opMisition Ui Judge Wood. Some of tlio old Liberty party men bolted out right, while nil looked sore atnur-ement. The proba bility it that the Liberty men and Free Soilere willcall another Convention. Hy the way, a resolution was in troduced, recommending a clause iu the new Constitution prohibiting " Banks of disjountaud circulation." The minutes of the Secretary show that the resolution passed, but it will probably bo suppressed entirely, or " laid on Ihe table." iu the published pi-mot-dmus. I have said lhat every thing not squaring with regulnr Locntocoisut waa laid on the uinie. i nere tuny, per-Imiia. have bemi uiie or two exceptions, in reaiild to a resolution iu favor of universal suffruKe, &c which barely squtettd through. The Convention refused tn indorse Chase, w hile tlioy warmly eulogized Tom Beu- toll. In the midst of nl this " noise nnd confusion" iu the ureal Free Soil Democratic Family, the Whifii remain, lor (be present, perfectly qnirt, not liking to interfere in family difhcultiiu until' tho lime cornea lor doing good. The prospect now is. that the no munition of Smith will help Judge Johnston nu uie m awrs neaervi' In Inoite, yours, etc L'hild ' her sister had. ami tlm "Uul boduV m aim -n. ed the fairy, had pinched the po. r ' wean Elsie." Then again ou Sunday, or holvduy nights, she would tell me how, when a child, she hud wished to tin n nun and that she would go out in the dark, pitch nivht. and kneel ou Ihe emuud iu the middle of their irarden. nnd usk the good Virgin and thu Saints to prny for her for 11.1.1 I.... ..I I 1- ' J iiiwiiyn linen a reunions gin. Then she had actually heard the Bensbeo crv. It came wailing around the house when her father died ; and she had heard it a week before his death, when he wasluiie and hearty, Sin- hud heard it at night-hill one evening when she was crossing tho glen below their cottage, as she wu coining from Colernino, where she had been spending the day with her grandmother. It commenced "low and mournful like" in iho bushes beside her, and then mimed around the hills, swelling out louder and louder, until it ceased behind the cot- As she would dwell on this, my fancy would pteinro to me thu enthusiastic, imaginative Irish nirl, standing with lips apart, listening to the mournful wail-iug uight-wiiiil, which her alter in tub lea shaped into tho sad poetical Benhcc ; mid if 1 had had the skill of uti artist. I would have made a lov ly sketch, 1 am sure; mr io plainly did her descriptions bring before me her figure and the surrounding Ian Iscnpc, lightened with the warm hue of the linjeriuc twiliirlit so peculiar to Ireland. Bridget Bat down ou the rus beside me. and when we went to bed that night, good reader, it was later than u nana pec tin it Aunt Murv imagined : but 1 hd heard all Bridget's troubles, had soothed aud comforted her, hud read her lover's last letter to her for Bin-had a lover what girl has not? and sent her tu bed with u heart considerably lighter than when, with aching head but patient fingers, she had prepared my nice uigui meai. Bridget's father. Dermot Kei-evnn. was n Senn lnimn by birth, but of Irish parentage. His father had set tled in Glasgow, nnd (hero did Dermot spend his early years, and obtain thriitiuess und steadiness, qualities not often found in an Irishman. Dermot was early apprenticed to a ganliuer, and when he waa out of his term of service, his mauler recommended hiui to an ln-.ll gentleiiiau, who wanted a gardner for his place, "The Forest," atColeraiue, There Dermot came, and it was not long before he brought home to his pr-tty gardner's-cottage, the beauty ut Colemiue, Grace Mullen, who he hail persuaded to be his " bonnie wife." as lie called her. Tboy must have been very happy for sweeter domestic pictures 1 have never heard descri bed, either in tale or poem, than my good Bridget would sketch iu her little stories of their home, durinc her lather's iile. hut this blessed happiness could uot Inat forever. One hue spring day poor Dermot w,;s bronchi home from the imrdeu. no nt " the areut house." on n litter, nearly deud. He had fallen from a high tree while lopping off a brunch. He lingered only a few hours, leaving the lonely widow with her "lour childer," to bidtlu wilh life aloiie. Bridget was Ihe eldest, aud she wns only twelve. I lien there Waa Grace, aud fciUit,, nml hulM Jinnv. the baby to be eared for. Bridiret waa sent m her unele'a at Glasgow town, and the tfrund toother ol Uraes Here- vhii gave the shelter nf tier poor roof to the rest of ineiii. lviiniw nerevno oponeu a nine shop iu ner grandmother's front room, and did bits of work for the people all arouud Coleruiue," a Bridget expres- ll'U II. A year after tho kind, levins father's death, home came Bridget from Glasgow town. Heruucle, the rich distiller, was en rayed at her. for she bad told hi wile that she hud rather starve iu Ireland than un tn the meeting house all day Sunday, and sit straight upat her sewing and knitting the rest ol the week. Poor girl ! the strict, rigid habits of her uncle's llirihy Scokb wife had driven Iter almost frantic. Sho, who had roamed ut will, over hill aud glen, and who had never been bound down lo any duty. Tho domestic affairs of her own home had always been soon dispensed with, and sue nan spent most oi mr time rambling through, the forest, or by the siruiun-side, or playing with (jrocey, Elsie, and the baby, chasing their shadows on ihe grns-sy hill-side i then how could she hear the strait-laced notions aud riles uf her notable Scotch aunt T Not at all, and she told her so ; and the Y sent ber home Ut the starvation her aunt had often taunted her with, holding it in perspective, when she would lie rebellious. The mother, grandmother, and children crowded around her. Grace h'erevau held her child, from whom she had been so long parted, close tu her bosom, and xouoed wun joy. " And so,' said the old grandmother, "the 'Scotch quean, as poor Dermot used in say, told ve we starved hero f Never mind, dnrlint, you shall always have a p raiy, even U we all do without." Poor Bridget worked early and lute for the farmers' wives, but she only made a "small thriHe," a she satd, and sometimes they were so poor lhat they had scarcely a potntou apieco in the house. " And did you ever wish your If bark in Glasgow town, Bridget f " I inquired. " Nivor ma'am," was the girl's energetic answer; and I do not believe she ever did, for the eeniid light uf home-love shone iu her poor, Irish home, lor whirl) her li'tle affectionate heart had piin d, under the wealthier but cold root of her uucie. Thin I came tn Aiueriky." " But, Bridget, how came you to think of America T" " Och, the sirli all around talked id tout Amerikv. and my aunt s cousin s nusimnd s Bister writ home a letie ui mti t her imkiiii; sich a power ol money. Well. talked lo mother about it, but she cried, and so did grandmother, and they asked uie where I'd set t he our pound to pay my passage with. lhat kept me piiet a tut, tor t ii niver Been bo biir a heap ol money But one day, when 1 w is sh ikuitr up urmidmoihcr bed, I felt a great big lump in it, that wns sewed up in ine sniiw, ami t dragged it out, anu it was mi old stock ing with money tied in it. 1 ran scream in' with toy to mother. But och, how she cried and grandmother scolded. Then 1 cried, ton, and grandmother came and hugged me, and told me to give over cry in, that there wa ihe money if 1 wanted it. She said she 'd hid it away in the bed, years a gone, tu keep off the narit uay. ltieu I cried, it rand mot her, let me no till Amenky, and I II send ye so much sold lhat keep the dark day away forever,' " Then mother said, ' Lei the girl gn, for sur she had light given her, ami she ktmWa heller than us, " Old you nt leel a utile sorry, Bridget, when the; gave up at lustl " 1 asked. " Nu mn am, not a bit," she continued ; " aud I hur ried around and got ready. The girl thai had writ the letter homo abuut Aiueriky, sent nut a ticket tu her sister tu cume nn thu vessel that was just going ; but she Rosy McLu nail all it was was very sick, and could n't got and so mother bought her ticket lor me Hut, och, when mother mu me good bye, and kiased me, and letl me nn ihe vessel, then 1 cried. 1 did n I cry a bit when I bid grandmother and the childer good bye at the house, but it wa when 1 saw mot tier vning town the Bideut (he vessel, and get into ihe. tumbling little boat, that I cried. 1 fell oo lonely like, just a 1 did when father wa buried; and I watched the little boat, mid her red cloak, until she got ashore. I lien there she stood, aud shook her handkerchief until it gruwed too dark to see her. Orh, Miss Emm, but then ried all to my so 1 1 though tor 1 wa ashamed tne that was her (Mine was kind tome, and worked with mewhi-n she could, and took good care of my money which she put all away, and I didn't spend a uuo rue no me ol tier old dresses and an ota 'emu, so i saved up all my money for four months, men 1 writ my lirstletter lo mother, und sent her the niAiweu UOIiaiB. MOh Hridgot!" I exclaimed, "why did you not write before?" The girl laughed miietly, and replied, "I wanted to send a big bit of money when I writ home ; and I know'd the neighbors would stare, and grandmother would open her eyes, and mother would be so proud nf her Bridget send in' home three pound and oyor. Then came a letter Irom them at home and it made me cry so. They were all well, and had got my money;- but mother tried to scold a hit bekuse I badn t writ before, but she was so placed to hear lliut . ...... u,-,u wen, unit sue did u t scold mucn. ineni worked on, but I felt lonely like, and kept thinkin' how me 'twould ho tu have Gmcey with me. So I saved up twenty dollars, and sent it to Irelaud; and jeon Gracey camo tome. Mother couldn't come, I know'd for grandmother was so old us lo stay in bed nil the time. I 'd hevn a year in Ameriky when Gracey came over; then after awhile 1 sent for Elsie, for the times were still harder in Ireland, and mother had bud work to get ou with her poor old sick granny lo nurse. Elsie seemed so little when she cauio, that 1 didn't know what todo wilh her; but Mrs. Hill, (he kind soul, said she might come and live with me; that sho could piny with ihe childer, and rock the ciitdle, and (6 errands, and she would give her her clothes the first year; then, if she was smart, she would give her a half dollar a week for Mr. Hill wa richer now. 1 tni k great pleasure in Elsie, she was good and minded 1 me ; but Gracey was headstrong like, aud would have her own way. She gave me a dale of trouble, and many 'a the night I've laid awnke ond thought about uer. one liked to tno me, and mnke me believe she was worse than she wns. " At lust Mr. Hill and his wife made up their minds to buy a large farm clear up in the country, a great many miles oil' from Philadelphia, and EIbio and me went with them. This did fin.e.-v ,fmd. mid she Wns n belter girl ever nfierward, for when she wob left nloiie in Philadelphia, she saw how cross she 'd been in ine, and thi made her sorry ; mid she wut to church rigilar, ami attended to her duties, nnd used to go and talk lo my good old priest, Father Shane, for he writ about it to me, unbeknownst to her och, but I waa gbid thin, " Alter I'd been in the c juutry on the farm I mane a letter came from mother, telling us of pour grand - n.Muit-1 s ueam, anil ine letter had nil tears over it, which made Elsie and me cry, for we know'd they were jHMir mother's terns. In this same letter she said she wished wo could send her a ticket to cume to Ameriky with; that if ihe could only see her Bridge, once more belore she died, she would behuonv. This Was spring-time, so I takes un Elsie's money and mina. and gnea off Ui Philadelphia to buy a ticket for mother und show Gracey mother's letier. Gracey had no mon ey to give me, (or she was ulways exiravugaiit ; and no wonder, for he was pretty, like mother, and liked a bit of finery better than plain folks like myself. She cried about it, but I comforted her, and (old her niver un lid, I'd enough ; but 1 couldn't buv mvaelf adress that I did n't let her know though for fenr she'd fret. So I bought the ticket, aud got Father Shane to write a letter for me. I was going tu stay in Philmlel Ida a week ao Mrs. Hill said I might; but the day er I bought Ihe tjjket. a waifoil came nil tho WrtV from the lat in to tell me Elsie was dying that she had kuueu tie- day 1 letl, und find thu meases. Then again,. Miss huua, I waa in trouble, for Elie waa so good, aud nlie looked like fa I her. Och, I cried a'l the way out tn Mrs. Hill's. Sun-enough, when I gut there my poor baby was m-ar gone. I nuraed her night aud day, poor child, but 'twas uo use, God took my wean awiiv from me. The night ihe died "ho oieued hereyesand know'd for the first time. I thought she was getting well, ugh the doctor suid she couldn't. ' Bridget," siz she, " we'd a nice nl iv down in the leu, hadn't we ! " ' I could n't answer, my heart was so full, for I auw lie thought idle waa home iu Colemiue. " ' Bridget 1 him called, and held not her little hands to me. I took her iu my. arms, cry in' all the tune. Let's go into the cottage,' siz she, for father and grundmotle-r have been callin' us a good many times. snarK nut here, fidget, and cold hold me, Bridget, ar, for I can't see,' Then she culled ' mother! ' and try in' tn nut her little arm around my neck, said she wanted to go to sleep, and told me to sing to her. I hugged her close up lo me, aud nfter a few words about the long grass the tout ot the hill by the cottage, where she and nor used to roll over plnvin'. sIki drew n lone breath. and as I ki-wd iier, she died. Ooh, but th il was tin darkest niht I Iver spent, Mias Eioh. 1 was ull alone, for Mrs. Hill had gone to sleep, iclliu' uie I must call her if Elsie was worse. There I sat all night oldm my dead dnrlint close to my bosom, ton heart- truck to cry. Bui when in the morning Mrs. Hill tried to lake her from me, they any i screamed und held on lo tier like a mad person. " 1 niver saw Elsie afterward, Mia Euiia," said tin poor girl, with tear stroamiug down her rhecks, " for when they buried her iu (he cold earth, 1 was raving sick, and they said I would die too. Part of the time know d tlo-m, and pari of tti time I was cmy, but A New Fntliy The already largo family of Pnlhyshavereoeived an addition to their number, lo the form uf a young broth er from Swoden, by the name uf Viucstpaihy, .or the cure of diseases by ipecific active movements. The method consists iu npplyiug friction, motion, percussion, Ate, to thu internal organs, by a corresonding aeriuu Ihey will do well. But, to cover up this difficulty, the 0,1 1 ha rl'ac of the body. By lung practice, the pro- Statesman resort to its usual argument, and brags as loud as if confident or success. Ten thousand majority Murder am) suicides iu connection, seem tu be very frequent thi year. John Figg shot a girl named Spika-well, iu Louisville, un Wvdusday last, aud then shot himself. Mr. Gist enumerates 102 churches in Cincinnati. Suvaral large church edifices are uow erecting. people should see me, and 1 went off lo my Ihde b lessors of this art claim to lnna discovered the precise spot ou the external surfaoe, where a nudge, a blow, a rub, Ac, must tie given lojog. jar, quicken or slacken the motion of the brain, heart, liver, spleen, or any other organ, its operations may be corrected, and made to conform tu the lawsof health. This new art oliims great success whore it has been practiced, as In Stockholm for forty years, and uV affecta produced approve the plau. 1 and cried all night ; for I (bought 1 wns fuitlor away from them than lather was, for he waa iu heuveii, aud I wus uut on the wide waiher. Then 1 thought of what father used to tell me about God leiu' with us always, and tried tu stop ui) cry in' by pruyin' " - now oiu were you tiieu, unugei r " Not quite fifteen, ma'am." " Were yon uut glad when you auw America, my lumr chilil ? ' ' tudnde nnd indade I was, for I'd been sick all the way, aud when the vessel came up the river to I lum-.Uh.lu. I men with n.v. Hul when the vessel anchor ed, aud the people cmne from shore, and 1 heerd (hem a greetiu' oue another, my heart fell like u gn at lump ul lead, for I'd uuUaly in thia wild, new country to greet me. Then I cried ncniu, but it wa with the hearl-acho. 1 Bat there all alone, when one of Ihe wit-men, who hail been very kind to me ou Ihe pas-e, .came up tu me. and brought wilh her n man, who, she said, used tn know my mother when she was a slip ul a fill in Coleraine, nnd if 1 would po homu wdh lum. bu would lrv tn liod me a ulnre. I bundled up my -'..ii,.. u,i..',-i, irr milv few nieces, and went wilh him. This was on Saturday mgm hko, .uisa ciimi.aim on Monday ihey look me to a place. " Was it a nice place, Bridget t " " Yes, ma'am ; but 'twas a plain, hard-working f"- when I'd my si uses I prayed God would just keep me alive to see my mother. He heard mv iimyer. she continued, crossing herself devoutly, "and before mo ther came 1 was well aam, though my heart was lull t sorrow lor ciiie. When I sent for mother, 1 lold her not to come till fall, fori Ihoiight by lhat time I'd lay by a trnio of money io i.-iko a room iu runaueipuia anu ouy some iriiiture. All summer j worked hard, ami Mrs. tun, the good soup give me as much money in the IhI) as if LiBie had tH-en workiu loo. one know d what 1 wnni d with it, and she give me some old chairs, and a bed. too, I was sorry to leave her, for her ami her husband w-as kind to ui alwavs ; but I know'd mother would feel lonely like in town without me. So I packed up II my ihiugs, and came iu Mr. Hill s market-wagou to town. Father Shano had writ to me lhat the vessel was expected iu a week or so aud 1 came to town just in time to n ut a nice room fir mother. I'd enough of money to piy a nioiiih's rint ahead, and to buy some Wood- 1 iH-ii i oollgm B carpet auu m nice ueir.ieiiu, and a table, and a good, warm stove oh, yes, and a ruth toned form, or solv, us ihe people call it here, that ked like the one wo hail at home in Coleraine. Gracey give me a little trifle, which was a grate dale for her, see in' it had been summer-time, and hc had to have a new bonnet, hem' in town. The night belore mother came, Grncev ran round irom her place to see mother h room, and how proud fell, as we aloud in the middle of it, and looked around at all the things we fell so mh. Now. ii we only Had a uurcau, said uratoy, io put under that little glnaa of mine.' unuev nlwava h id nncr nonona man me. i niver thought a bit of a bureau, for 1 know'd rnothe had a chii winch would hold .liidn a cloitiea anil hei all Ihev lu'd, poor thing". Father Nhnuecniue (ose me Hint night, too, mid biougiit a big, black, Wot Lrniss to Iuhiu over the mantelpiece, ami it string ol linn-m - j "rr.' j yen- little tut, poor bisie wnuiH come io my muid. and I'd think ol how mcrrv she'd been if she d been I iv in : ami urnle ti ara would roll down in spite ol me. Father Sh uie spoke veiy pretty about her, ami made mo leel belter, slid alter lie aud uracey went away .ntdown by the stove, aud l be re 1 tnl all nikht, foi did n'l want to rumple the bed I 'd made up for mother, for tho rheels looked so white and smooth. The next wliernooii tho vessel laiuo up ihe river. but H w.is ten o clm k at night belore mother got oft Their 1 liwd on the wharf, tnlkiu' lo her, tuai was on the nuld vessel, all the evenin . When she hi st site me, she cried, " ' Ih h. ami it's my Bridget, God blesx her1' " She w a so glad, she'd hnve tumbled uei1oi but lor one of lli sailors who caught her. We both cried and laughed, and some laughed at Uf ; bill the good sailor who had cnught ahold of her when she won la in . told Her locpeerup, mat sue d aeu be ou snore wilh her Bridget. He helped her down the Bide ol the vcel. aud when she huugi d me nnd we both cried. saw him wipe his eyes. Ho shook hands with us Uith, t hi I asked where we lived, mid said he'd come In are us. " But. och, did n't mother store when she aee'd her nice room. Then she thi ow'd her upnu over her head und cried like nimby. Jinny had glow d so tail 1 did n't know her. I was glial she was (all, for I'd hated to see her. for fear she M make ine crv about Elsie, beiu little like her; but she wu near n lull asliincey, ami right preiiy. " Mother exKUnm d all the room, and hi seed me, and hueged ine, and then, w hen Ginei y came, she lonk- d verv proud for Grtieev w.tssolioe lookin'. Grncev Btaid all iiiejit, and wo made Jinny and In-r a bed on the Hour with the cushion of the firat, for mother snid she'd aleep wilh her Bridget. We talked nearly all niidit, nnd we all cried about Elsie, and I told 'em u great many pretty stories about her. " ' Yes, mother,' said Gracey, ' Elsie, the dnrliu, we alwava a blesmii' to PridiM, but I wa a trouble.' " 1' made her hush, and tnld bee she wasn't a had ih she oretemled to I.e. noil then alter n bit we nil Went tn sleep. But after I 'd I U a-h epw hile I wakened and there win innthor Innin' uver me crym' and kiaaiu mot 1 didn't ope mv eves, but laid ao still i for oh. Miss Eniin. it was so nice tn lme my own inoiuer nu aide me, nnd llieii I wasnl'iaid I whs dndtiiu'." Well, Bridget,' 1 said, a the gu l wiped her eyes how did you suppml your Utile In y T "erv liv. mu ii ii. sue re ue nu unn en re of ourselves. Mrs. Mill cattle ul iilul aked JlliiiV lo go and live Willi her. I lum I got a nice place at poor Mrs Keuyon's iimiliei . Vm kunwrt Mis. h v..i in Kim, i was sue n imi i' i Indeed I did know her. for Mary Kemoii had been one nf mv dearest friends, ami only a few shnrt month before Ihe grave had closed over her the be iuttlul and the good. "Well," continued Bridget, "altera bit I got mother two nice H rat-floor rontus, at the comer ul the street where she lived ; and in Uie Iron! one she opened a tnioceiit Bridget's lift.. Her lover th. n.f Lind. hearted sailor who had been so intereated in tliera when widow Korevan lauded He came to see them L ,i had promised, and thouph Bridget and the wid-w thought that Gracey' pretty aula and bright eyea orougnt inm so olten uo' evrnin's," ihey soon found out 17". ? g011 Bri"' I'e was after. i fi ! e enr "ow Soue ,"";0 we wr ingaged," aaidllndget "and nearly that since I have seen or heerd tell of him," and she sighed heavily. " Where did he go to, Bridget ? " " Why, ma'am, lie worn in a states government vessel Ut ihe lugees, and be said ho d write to me ; but I ve niver had a line from him since ho sailed. He writ a letter to me at Norfolk town just before he went oil, and told me lolove him true 'til became buck, then wo d bo man mid wife. Mothar Jong since wanted me to take another hen inr .i.n i'.n ...;,. ni.i and bein' plain like, nobody will have mo, then 1 '11 be n old maid Hint nobody liks or cares for; but I'd sooner bo nn old maid than break my vow to Patrick; and even Father Shane hns scolded mother and Gracey about it, for they both taze me and he sez I'm right." " How do yuu mean break your vuw, Bridget 1 " " Whv vim ma Mi, P....... l,..i. Dni.iK l -...) r 1 old Ireland so much that we rigilurly ingaged ourselves, like the people used to in the old country." now was umt, my child 1 "Patrick takes Prayer-honk the night before he Went away, mid stood in tint middle nf moilmr'a innm and swore on it by the holy cross, that he niver would marry any woman but me, Bridget Keruvan; och, but his oath was so solemn und beautiful, it made me tremble all over. Then he puts ihe Prayer-book in mv lap, nnd we took bold of each other's hands over it, and I iimoe uio same vow, and then we both kissed the book. Mother and Gracey were by nnd heerd it all. How can I, then, Miss Enna, even if I wanted to, take ano ther bean 7 And I 'm sure if niiv thine happens In him shall niver waul another beau, for he was mv tirar renl one, and he seemed lo come right in Elsie's place like uiy nenri. As she si tiled henvilv F rom furled hr l,v 11 1 in v her Bhe was perfectly right in keeping good faith to the absent Patrick; that she need not mind if they did trouble her.it was better to suffer annoyances than give io un wrong. 'T' -lli-'ht she Cold in lltd. " thev lazed mnan Urkarm I would n't hnve any thing tn say to one of the neighbor's boys from Coleraine, who know'd us when we wore childer; and mother said it was her belafe that Patrick was safe and happy somewhere else, married some niner woman. I hia made me very mad, and started up ami went out of the house without suyin' Wold J but mother rntl alter me down the street, nnd made me kiss her good-night, and we made up and parted friends," " That wiib rmht. Bridget, for she is vour mnlhr. nnd though mistukon, she meant it for the best." " I know that, Miss Enna, but they trouble me so milch, I sometimes hate to go home." Then ahe went softly up into her bed-room and brought down a poor, worn-looking letter, and a dilapidated book, wilh nun cover off, and the leaves part gone. IhiN is his letter from Norfolk town, Mist Enna; rend it, ploe, aloud, for I nivor lire heuriu' it." read it, and found it to be a manly, affectionate, over-like letter. Hetouchun v reminded har nf her vow, iu homely, plain language, it is true, but real ian words wein they, that brought tears to my eyos. " iihi is inm hook, Dridgei f " Oh, Mia Eniin." replied the cirl. look tin? down. und her round face grew crimson, " it ' a book of his'n. Hu used tube always readin' iu it ; nnd one day he throw'd it into my lap, and suid, when 1 could read it tie a give me a silk gownd ht tor a quane to wear. I laughed nud thought noihiu at all about tt until after he'd been gone above a year, when 1 loiind it down at mother's one night in my old chist, which mother had given me when I 'd bought her the bureau pour Gracey wanted to had. I ve kept the book iver since ; aud I ke it out ul my drawer at niuhts, nnd sit down and ry lo see sninelhin' in it. but even if I could rade. which 1 can't, I could u't see iiothin' iu it, for it always innkes ine cry," 1 took the book Irom her with great curiosity t I was anxious to seo what was the nature uf it, for I h 'ped to judge by it of the character of this Sailor-lover. It was Falconer's Shipwreck. I was salified, and was a tinner friend than before in Patrick. A few weeks afterward, one night Bridget came home with a face perfectly rudiaul, ur "Ajmia," as she would nave said. 1 was reading in my bed-room all done. She came in, closed Aunt Mary's door, and giving me a letter, said. " Rade it, dear Mis Enna, rade it ; he's alive, and ia comin' home ; " and she sal down on the rug beside me, and laughed and cried at once aa I read the letter aloud to her. tinre enonth, the lover was safe and true. He bad written Ut her often, but the letters had been lost, he ' supposed, ns he had uoer heard from ber; but he felt sure, he said, that she was still his Bridget, even if be nu iiih near irom ner. " There, you nee. Miss Enna. how bad I 'd benn if I 'd done as they wanted me tu," sho exclaimed ; " and n Father Shane said to mother to-night, when he read the beautiful letter for he brought it tu me. Patrick writ to nun, and suit him this fetter tn me inside ot his'n, bekuse he said he'd writ so often lo me, and sure a letter would rach mo through Father Shane." " I'utieut Reader, Him is a true story ; hut 1 am the nly ono to be svmpnihued with in it, for I lost my jewel of a chambermaid. A few months afterward Patrick came home and claimed his faithful Bridget. We had a busy time when she was married for the whole family took an interest in good Bridget's fortune. Patrick was a nice, healthy, bright-looking Irishman; itid when on the Sunday alter he arrived he came to take her to mass, I nw him as they walked down the street togethor, look at her sturdy little figure with as much admiration as it it had possessed the nue proportions nf a Venus. Love is such a beau ti tier. Father Shane married them, and Patrick rented a nice little bouse in the suburbs of our town, aud took Widow Kerevmi home to live wilh ihem. Bridget it happy wife ; but she haa one trouble, and th;it ia, her huahaud'a calling takes him away from her, aud places him in danger; but when he return a from long voye gra Bhe ia aa bri-ht anil merry asa Inrk. I fie oilier flay I went to see her, and as her tittle girl Elsio came nestling close to me, Bridget said. " bver since lhat child was bum, Miss cans, I leel that my blessed dnrlint has come back to me. Och. but He ' been kind to me," she said, crossing herself with devotion, " Inr he give me back both Patrick and Elsie." Good girl ! Gnd had indeed been kind to her, for he had bestowed upon her those priceless git Is of the spirit Faith and Truth. In a Hurry. Pnilie, Clerk of the Common Pleas, has been sick, con fined to his bed for a few days. No interest particularly au tie red, uidesa it were the matrimonial, as none could be married without license, and none could give that same but the Clerk, harly Sunday moron g there was a thundering at rniiie s bed room door, wmm being opened, in stalked hair young Irishmen, good looking and well dressed. Says the forward one. Is your name l ame T Yes," said Mr. P. Clark of the CoorlV sava Pal. That same," Bay Paine. Thou 1 wants a license to he married, " said the ngiiab'd individual, " ami I wauls ye to be in a hurry about it, on acctmut of the child." (,' ) 'ante fainted. rutin Dealer. " lies, ma am ; out iwas a piam, iimu-w omnia -1 - . - - . ;.i ily t they kept tnly m; and they had a lot of childer "ich kept her nicely. Those who heard Gov. Johnston at Jefferson, and who now read our report of lhat speech, will be at once conscious of the short-enmings of our attempt In give it m print as a on re skeleton ot his masterly address. Nine columns nf small type would be required I'm a report in full. The best pnanihle transcript would not do him justice. When the banished Athenian orator, Echuies, n cited in the laud of his banishment the s)oech of Demosthenes, w Inch hail wrought hia defeat and exdr at iiuie-amid the plaudits nf his excited hearers he exclaimed, " how much more enthusiastic would he your admiration, did you hear Demosthenes himself1" The report nf Gov. Johnston's speech comes in it Hoe force only from hi own lips. Ahtm-bvfa Telegraph. How happens it lhal Judge Spalding and Senator Swill weir uot among the delegates at the Cleveland tree Soil Convention r Are ihry at length tatished that It is a Kouiewhat hsxardous business to attempt to lead two distinct pirttes, of opposite political creeds f or are (hey becoming rnnviucid that they can beet atconiphsli their ends by standing behind the curtain just now, and auming a virtue they hate not. Hav. iug reminded o go it strong lor noon, in onier io reinstate themselves as (he lenders of ihe Locofoco party Summit, i would haidly do to go og truly and tnke a sent in a Coim ..tion called to notuiusie au opposing ail.hdiile for (io, r : rveu It they de-irrd In see. Snrh a nomination Heeled Such n Imsinesa they could eiitiul to the hand ul our trieuds Spelman, Dewey, and Edgerioti ; who, uotbiiig loth, seem to have gone into the work wilh alacrity. Well, well t men will illiileitttaiid lliesti lliiitH some nf these days, ll At the Judge covets his truck with proloundost miming. Nine mi Beacon. Peirr McUnrlv was arreate.1 ai S.mduaky City ou Monday Inst for passing iilerteit money ones al tered to fives, Ohio banks. The R .ill oad Irom Coviiuttou, opposite Cincinnati. Ut Lexington, is commenced, '.Nl mile being under cun-iract. it The census Inker mention as curious fuel lhat they do find n single negro over ion vrura nf agr, who was notwell acquainted wilh Geu. Wahii.gtnu. The rnivt isitv of Mn log in ib now In full operation All tuition is perfr.ilv free. One sfH tion of hind in every township in the State is set npati for Us endow, inept. It is located at Ann Arbor, ami the buildings err unsurpassed for neatness and accomodations. John Van Buren has been rlioen a delegate to the New nrk Deinnermie Convention at Syracuse, uot withstanding the efforts node tn defeat bun. J